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o R&lt;&gt;lind Table Rhea
finds clues to recent killings.
Stereo.D
rn ra ·w e Dlnotaura Baby
keeps repeating a dirty word
he learn~ fm111 watching lV.
Stereo.
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(!]) 18 Sightinga lin . , .
lnveatlga)lo~ Into the strange
lights that haunt a T.exas
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I!J MOVIE: Kntght Rider
2000 (2:00)'
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121 Nallhville Now Stereo.
8\.arry King Uvel
9:30 (i) ra (I) 8 C...,.. Wilder .
Ricky urg~s Malissa .to
explore the dltht of a first
kiss. StW80.
.
l!lliiD ·o e . Stereo. Q •
(!]) • Ukely su..,.c~~ The .
murder of a writer of
. unautho~zed biographies Is
. • lnve~tigated. Stereo. Q
10:00 (I) 8 0 I'll Fly AWIJ,Gwen
returns home; Forrest ends
his affair with Christine.
Stereo.~
· ~
(I)Newe
·
~· (I) 211/20. Stereo . .
Ql' e IJ2) 18 Plckll Fences
A man rides Into town on a
stoleil elep~Jl Stereo. Q
• (!])eHunter ·
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I WISH THEY'D
· ALL ACT UPH

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· PHILLIP
ALDER

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SOUTH

Firm foundations
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. be laid
By Pbllllp Alder

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tr9-Graph Matchinaker instantly re~
vellls wh1ch sign~ are romantically per-

ARIE.8 (March 21-AprH 11) II yQu mereteet for you. Mall $2 plus a .long, self- . ly rely on your assertlye.ness, two imaddre$sed, stamped enyelope to 'p0rtant objectives aren't . apt tO be
Matchmaker, C/o this newspaper, P.o: achieved today, The h•der you push,
. BERNICE
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44&gt;101-3428. the harder you're apt to be pushed
BEDEOSOL. SCORPIO
(Oct. 24-No~. 22) You mlgtit back. .
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· . h~ve .to deal with an lr,dlvldual today TAURUS (Aprii20-MiiJ 20) In order to
. whose political views d •metrically op- .expedite matters tOday. you might be
-'il•riiil
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pose yours. Keep a.cool hea&lt;i- because tempted to take aome Irrational shqrt,
this Ia a situation that could heat up cuts. Instead of saving you time, trouble.
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quickly.
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. and effort, .they could-arid up compUc~t·
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SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) In • · ing things.
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The World
Almanac~ Croisword
Pu~le
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ACROSS
each aide of
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36 Baaqtylil!Jill!J l.:tl!Jl!J[J L1UL.I
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37 o:oalle of
term
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5 Sla'a llbllnga •
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l!IUI.:lLJ lJL!Jlt
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41 llruilula
I 2 Part oi lila
43 Selfl '
l:IUl!J l!lULJU
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LilLI
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13 ~~moniUI
r:,~:~ctr;~r,
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l!J LJ LJ lt
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41 By w1y of
14 Honea! - ·
48 Frc:m- - Z· Li~LJ l1LJUL:J U!J.:Jr.J
15 Bend lht
50 Ungraceful
lU] l!ll:.l lt ~ ll l:l 1.:.1 ll Ll U
·knee
53'Fond du -,
17 Gc&gt; ..lilY
Wla.
LJl!ll!ILJ r.JUL:I
18 SwlftllrcraH · 54 GOIIIP (II.) . [1ULJL:Il!l ltlJLJ lill!Jlt
55 Flihln1 rMI
LiiJr.J UUiJl!J LJULJU
18 ~::~)cap:
[jlJU ll.lr.JUU ULJr.JU
20 Overturn
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22 - Chaney
herlld:T,
Eclr.l~· [•llll:lr., l•llct iiJI-1
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·-sa Maru•r n•
ahtllar
(Scot.) ·
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. 27 AbllruH
WI a.
31 Perhlnlng Ia
1 Ea-dropo
5 ..,_elnp~nl
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light
Llurant
7 Set mammal
34 With a.l11 1111
3 Canvai
a Locatta

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GALLIPOLIS ._ · Gallipolis
officials have scheduled a town
'meeilng for all interested citizens .
wiib questions abouf the operation
of city government for Thursday,
Oct. 29 at 7:30 p:m. in the Ariel
Tbeatte. .
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'nte meeting's purpOse is to give ·
citizens direct contact witli municipal offtc:ialll. PropoSed changes 16
the Gallipolis city eiWter 10 be

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The truth Ia tha.t mec:tlcet .care tO&lt;Iay goes where
!he mohe{r~. " - Dr; Michael OeBakay.
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Pblllips, rlgbt, while Principal. Pat Stout, center, .,
looks on. Tbe 'bank's pledge os to buy one !lew
band .unlfiwill oi year for four years for _a total
cost or $1,000. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin
Pm~&gt;
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· · YNIFORMS PLEI)GE - Otilo Valley Bank ·
represe~~tative Lillda Roe, left, p~nts a P.ledge
letter Friday •lght dUring pre-pme festlvot~ at
tbe River Valley • GalUa Ac11demy lligh school
(oothallgame to RVHS Baud Director Tom

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.ENE.HOEFLICH
importance oC smoke detectors and exterior and interior, was ·pito- el'lltwe on fll"' pevention.
lmes.Sentlnel S!Jtr
hom~ escape plans,
.
rog1111lhed for doe film. The begin·
Poster contests are also •being
p
ROY - Two children
AI !east five of ibis year's major · nirif and endirrg, from the time the held in .lhe ~port and Rejoic. • a mati received severe btirtls · f!l"'s have beeR '&amp;tlributed· to chil. cal was received and the actual ing Life schools by the Middlcpolt
. re uihg !I child. lhoUslnds .of dol- dren playing widt cigarette lighters dispatching o~ fire rrucks to _the department. The posters will .lie
Iars iii. property were lost an4·. or-matches. Nationally that is the rerum of equipment to the srauon, · judged and. prizes awarded to lhe·
dbzens'of lives"were disrnlltCd as leading cause of death in residen- was-simula_le!l
.
,
winners. All will be displayed in
the. result of .IOllllrDcture tli'CS in . tial~ues ting three out of
Dyer said that dte video will be . business windows around the viiMeigs County so far this year. · . · 10
'
child fire dealhS.
u~ as a fire safi1!Y teach!ns tool. · )age. .
·
It is those facts which have
enny B~r, Middlepo!'t assis- It will be shown this .we_ek 10 sever- · Fire Prevention· Week is being·
encouraged ·members of Meigs . tant fire chtef, said that the forst al ~hools to educate childml8bilut · observed ·this week across the
County Fire DepattmCnts aDd the public showing of a video of lhe4o:w~at can happen when they play nation ill·remembnulce of the gre31,
Emergency Medical SCivice to do. recent Pearl Strut lite started by a ·· )VIth lighten~ mall:hes. . . . . Chicago fire of 1871 ill wllich 250 ·
milre-ln lite :way of community ll!ld · . cllild playjng .. 'If ith a cigarette,
Pros:mt!:'byr""'Jddie.nuon 11 · people died. The J~niliversary of ·
c ,SChOOl educaUon 'on rore ' pf~Ven- lighter Will kickoff that depart· · be c~n ~ Mi~~~- ~: that ftre, OcL 9, is always inclUded
DETEcToRS SAvE UVES • Stuchntl Middlelion.. ·
ment's obser:vance oC F'll"' Prcven- !ReD ~
"""'1'"" · , e~ ~the week selecled for the ol&gt;Serpci .ReJoidlti.UieSellooll._,tpostenitrelllnJ ·." So this wcek-Narional Fire ·lion Week. The video will be mg Ltfe Schools Tuesday. , . at rl'ance
· · , .. · · · ·. ·
·
tace ot•ob clttlctors 111. uvbla Uves. Here Eeau:r . · PreVention Week .. specia! ~- · . shQ'Wn during an open .house 11! 7 · ·S8J11ttc!ay Pomeroy firemen :U~
The week'a activities will foeus ·
......,
a dirt,_ lire chlel,loc!b over ~n made ·, sls iJ bebia placed on acUYtlies to p.m. Tuesday ~verung Ill ,ibe Mid· . 11 the Pomeroy E!CIIl(lR~
' on file safety,lild give an 9JlPOI'll!·
and
Painter
·communlc:ato to children the dan- . d l - fire ·stallOIL. ·.· . . " . ~ laltz In dte week Wtllgo to lite oily for local volunteer: fll"'men to
,__
r ......., · · · • ., tier of playing with mali:hes and
...,;;;, tictual aflernttiib of the fire, .Salisbury Elt;~n
· be· di~b~ Botblit
Continued on A-7
ptiJel . . . _tothewlnn~AIJ . cigarcucligbtori·, ,and)o_adultsthe
. --~en~ WI
.sin uung ___ -_.:
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voled on in the Nov. 3 general elec- various city departments, such as
lion will be explained and wiD also streets and -water, will also be invitbe ~ for questioits. · , ··
ed to attend and respond to ques.
ity Commi~sion members . lions.
,
Wilma Brown, P.O. McCreedy,
Those . witb questions are .
Dovel' Myers; C8rol O'Rourke and ei\couraged to fill out a form to
John Taylor will ljc on hand for the ' aJlll!:81' soon in lhe Gallipolis l)aily
meeting, in addition to City Man- Tribune and submit the form to
ager Glenn. Smith; City Auditor City Building by Ocl. ;!I.
··
Deborah Hughes and City Soliciur . . . ''The rown meeting will provide.
Douglas Cowles. Supervisors of citizens · wi.th an opportunity to
voice their questions and concerns
and get answers direct (rom c,iry.
officials," explllined · .Mrs.
O'Rourke, Who is president of the
commission. "This is ·the forst time
such a meeting bas been scheduled,
and if it is succesSful, we hope to .
do it again once or twici d!lring the
year."
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.121 Club Dine. Stereo.
8•8parla TO!Itsht
Sci..Crow and Mrw. King, ··

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:National Fire ·Prevention Week _is being observe.d

· I!J. OVII!: ...ICIIM (II) (2:00)

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Town··meetin·g is slated·
on·Oct. 29
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(!]) R-rine Stereo. D

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ee involvement stuff, and reall)• did
it. well, ·while over here the:'e -.vas
this group of Neanderthals who
insisted on doing things tl!e old
way?" Trumka asked.
~
"If it worked, they'll_ all Ire
jumping on the b31Jd wagon," he
Continued on A-6

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11:21'(J) MOV1~: Cooley Htsh (PG)
H .to. be
. .a.bit
. .more
._ unfind yourseH Involved In S0f1181hlng · condltfons appear
.' · (2:15)
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that's not good for.the buyer Orthe setl- certain ·than usual today. OOn't do any- 11:30 (D AIM TV Stereo. C
~n. t.hd
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. ' er .. bon•t w..,. time trying to make a' .. thing that could jeopardiZe your deal· .
Clle Mounter-·Miga&amp;lne
• _:.T
bad deal betl,r. 11 could only get ~rae. : lngs With aither a firm or IndiVIduaL ·
Weal Virginia fo!llbeli ..
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CAI'RICORN~Dec, 22...en. 11) Yoll and 1 • CANCillA (June 21-.lulr at) You may be
,!JUt~
Hill Ste
. rao ..
· 0c1. 3,1112 .
your "'ate rnuat tllkii meaaures today to ,. too qutay-lor you; own good today .. ,
·. ' · .
! 1!8B'thata,n a(gu"'ent lan't played out rn ·auempi to'domlnall! thcile who will not'
I'
8 Point After . .
8.._,.ne
.
Ypu might becQme very Intrigued with !· a IJl'bUc forum. If It Is, both your Images . bedt'dered abOUt. Becanslul witH who"' ·
products or ayaiems that are new and! will be tarnished. · . . · · . . .
yau lock hams.
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11:31(2)8T~WIIh '
different In the year ahead. Involve-· AQUARIUS (Jiin. 2!Hell. 11) You'.re , .LEO CJIIIJ 23-Aug. at) Be very mjndluf ·
...,~..:11 Q·
ments In progressive ventures ~ld apt to be ·ambitious and_induatriQus to-... of !18letY P'OC*Iures today when work- ·
. day, but you muat know your ·rrmlta- , .lng with. unlemUier eq~lpn1811t, II you
work out.well for-you.
With .
. UBRA (Sept; 23-0cL 23)11 might be 1 tlons• If you attempt to operate above! ·.•~on't kROW What you r.e doing, call
GJ
· -.Paine
difficult tor you .to achle.ve an·tmpQrt_ent . your aklll leyel, you. coyld produce a. · somebOdY In who doeo.
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.· . . . . : VIRGO lAue- IS-hpL at) II y.O!I gat ln- . . . Weat' Virginia lootbiH. . · .
• . ob'ective ' today be!;auae of yQIJr .un- poor product. · .
so~nd m8thodl and -proce&lt;turea..To be ' PIICI8 Cl'ab. 20Marah 28) You may ! . valved 1!1 a lOCI.. aport .that hu ere- 1 00
successful you must thlrik ahead ·and .. have little• patienCe today with thooe· . mente of oompatltlon, be ~xtra mlndiU!
2:
'' ian accaidlngly, Know Where to .1~ ' 'tfhG do thlngl you conalder.IOCialiy In•.. of h9W you conduct y\)UrMII. Be .. gna. C!.tiiiiiii!JI Aller PlPotn~owlllllillitoNhl
r~~ r~mance and you'll find it. The As-:1 C~tr~\. ,~ rreM that others eren'\ _CIOUI&amp; I~ U you ~~ld be a winner.
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tiated by lheir larger competirors or
In an interview earlier this year,
rejecting it and risking a strike by UMW President Richard Trumka
hinted at the possibility of an
theUMW.
Union and induslry sources have alliance with sevl)rill coal compaindicated that the motivation nies which he said could "treat~ il
beliind the new associarion is a greatlabrlratoty experiment.''
desire to achieve a new relations!tip
"What if there were one group
· of employers who did this ernplovberween management aild.labor.

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elaborate ori the announcement.
However, it represents a major
change for the Coal indltlllry, ~here
c.on~,ract talks have historically
been dominated by the natioO.:s ·
largest producers. In the past,
smaller operators have had the
choice of accepting what was nego-

Lead_poisoning big concern in a~ea

••=•

I10:30(J) MajOr 1A1gue BaHbelt
Chlcego White Soli at Seattle
Marinara (L)
·
121 Aultln Encllfl .
Major Le~gue BaHblll

Qrading Your ~avior aa well.

15 ~tiona, 134 Page•
AMultimedia Inc, Newapa.,.r .

Pleasant, October 4, 1992

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R-..oil

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By BRIAN J. REED
occupy space a1so used for other
Most elementary schools in the
Times-Sentinel .Staff
school activities.
district are forced to ()ave an in ihe
RACINE • Overcrowded and
At Letart Elelllllntary, the lib"!!)' ClassroomS,"Ivhich promotes a
outdated school facilities are the is located in the corner of a mulu- proble111 for teachers.
.
rarget.of a pnipoSed 5.8 mill bond purpose room, which is alsQ used
"If yoo have an in the regular ·
issue in .lhe Southern Local School as lhe cafeteria. music andarttoom classroom.s, you can't work on
District
· ,
and for physical education and larger p_roJects, ~~a~se anot~er
At dte heart of dte levy pioposa1 recesses dunng lhe cold months!
clqs wtll come m r~ght behond
is a $3,7 million building program, ' , Ord maintains lhat the ·entire thedt,'' he said. ·
which would add classrooms to school is disrupted once a week, · Students in lhe learning disabiliS~;~uthern High School, as well as when the rraveling music teacher ties, Olapter I reading atid coontyconstruetion ~;~f a new $6.9 million visits, and that t1rt progmms in the wide multiple-hand.icapped prQelementaty school, designed to .·· schools are not as effective as lhey grams are especially effec~ed by
house kindezgar:ICn through eighth should be, since work and sl!mlge the overcrowdimi. since_they uSe
grades. . .
.
. space
exrremely
Continued oil A-6 t&gt;
nah. Cold l!IP water should be run at least two·\
GET THE LEAD OUT • Tbe water used in
· Tlie new building Would
minutes
before using .It t~ mix f~nnu!~· Th~t \
makln'
formula
·can
be
a
source
orlead
in
an
replace six existilig buildings in dte
way
any
water stanaong m. tbe Iones where ot · ;
infant
s
blood.
Debbie
Babbit,
R.
N.,
right,
!lislrict, !he newest of which is 35
may
.
h
ave
been a~ntaniinated with lead from the
!liredor
vi
the
WJ,.C
(Wom~n, Infants and Chilyears old. Those buildings are
pipes
will
be
ftushed out
dren)
l?rogram
instructs
Alberta
Hysell
on
J,.etart and $yracuse Elementary ·
preparmg
formnl•·
for
seven-month-old
Han~
Schools and Soothem J~or High
' School. all of which date back to · ·
\929, Portland Elementary Sc(Jool,
built inl9Sl, and the district's
~d¢tgarten building, which was
·
construeled in 19!5S.
blood teSL By CHARLENE HOEFLICH · lead poisoning. .
She said that there is. a correlaThose rests are available
According to District Superin·
Tlmes·Sentinel Staff
tendent Bob ·Onl, student pQpula, POMEROY - 'With Meigs tion between amounts of lead in the through a child's regular pedialrirlon in dte district has held stelldy
County children at high ris.k for blood, and learning disabilities, cian, clinics or the children·s healdt
. through the years. However, an
lead poisoning, the Meigs County behavior dismlers, decreased IQ's program at the Meigs County
· increase in required curriculum and
Heal!h Department is conducting and cognitive delays. Meigs &lt;:;oun- . Heal!h Depanment
Torres said that lead is toxiC.:
programs has created overcrowding
an educational program on sources ty has almost twoce the nauonal
wherev~;r
it is and that it is found
average
of
cltil~n
·in
special
edu·on all of rbc dislrict's achool build,
of lead and warning signs.
everywhCRI. ·
ings. Those conditions vary among
Norma Torres, R.N.. nursing cation programs.
Chipped or · peeling paint
The nurse explained that lead
the b!Jildings, but in each of those
director reporfs that statislics
around
the house at .on· toys, ,
poisoning
at
low
levels
does
not
b!Jildingli; t~e .abilily .to teach is
recently 'released from the Ohio
ceramic
glazed
dishes, the colored ·
give
any
physical
symptoms
and
hmdered by madequate space and
'Department of Heal.th sh.ow.. that
.
p
rinting
on
food
\:lags, the so.it
that
lhC
oilly
way
to
detennine
if
a
faCilities, Ord said.
.
38.84 percent of all Meigs County
child
has
lead
poisoning
is
to
'do
a
on
A-6
Continued
"In otder to be creative, a teach·
.&amp;
chjldren under six are at risk for
er has to have space," Ord said,. .
CROWDED .
: This Chapter I ~ading cl8!18 at
. "and .in. order. to be effective; a ·
Portland
Elementary
School
ii·
typical
or the overcrowded coodlteacher must be creative."
tioos
In
the
Sciutbern
Local Scbool District. The c!asills located in a
' Library facilities in 1111 of the
small,. Cl1flverted restroom. A.hood issae on tbe November ballot
buildings are virlually non-eXistent.
addresses tb- CGnditiilns. Pictured are teacher Jan QiU, and StuBookshelves line the corridors in .dents Kayla Pullilas, Amy WU.On, Jke Apperson, Anthony Barber,
most of the elementary buildings,
Jer~y _ Pullins. ~inies.Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)
. .
and in other.s , rhe library musr

0 700 Club With Pat

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:Ordsays Southern's bond issue :.
needed for new district facilities

tA 751

+QI09 _8
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

t
w..at
Ni:rtb Ea•t
I am writing this column during the SOutb
Pua
2+
Pus
second week of the Barcelona Olym- ~
Pua
3 NT , All paS!!
pies. Probably some competitors have
been thinking ~long the lines of
openUIIIead: • K
George Ade: •Anybo&lt;ly can·win, unless
there happens to be a second en\ry." ~,___&gt;.·:._ _ _ __;__ _........_ .
Whim you are playing a br!dge blind,
it helps til have a second string·to your
boW. Uyour first line doesn't work out, occur only just over one-third of the
you bave a backup plan available.
time. So declarer took the finesse and
Il yo.u were in three no-lrtiiJ!p on to. went two down wben it lost.
day's dea_l, w~at backup plan would South shook his head lmowingly
you bave on mond?
·when he discovered tbat the hearts
W~st I~ the diamond kjng and kept were s-3..Yet .if only be bad laid the
playong on doamonds, South wmning foundations for hill contract a little
the third trick after East discarded a better, South would have avoided a
spade. !laving only .live top trieks, d~ gu~. After winning trick tbree with
clarer was forced to attack clubs. He the diamond ace, Soutb should cash his
was relieved when East, not Wes\ •.WOn top tbree hearts. If they split 3-3,.
wilh tbe ace. But when East switched South knows be has nine tricks. But If
Ill a spade~ South was impaled on the the hearts don't divide favorably,
bor.ns of a dilemma: Sbould be fiii!!SR South knows be needs the backup
or should be hope for a 3-3 heart spade finesse to succeed.
.
break?
,•.. ·
.,.. lilviiM ·u . - &lt;~~fd.ploy q - ·
· Well, the odds recom~d taking u- "'P&amp;JJIIp Alder, Ill cue of W. ..,.,...,..
the finesse ..A priori, a finesse is a 50' TrlqCIIJJ/Jo_&lt;&gt;J!jr,_,llleco/vmll.
50 proposition, wher~as a 3-3 split will _ ~ .._ - •PII0

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+AQ

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Sunny. High arouni1 ·70.

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.1074
tKQJ96
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Mlddleport4omeroy~alllpolls-Polnt

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. {AP) association called dte Independent
- App!llachian coal procJucers Bituminous Coal Bargaining
·interested in a union conrract dif- · Alliance. announced Friday thill~
fereilt from dte one which will gov- talks will begin Monday to rep~
-ern· the rest of the indtisuy begin a conlnlC~ whicb.expires Feb. l.
The negotiations will be .held .in
negotiations this week with the
'Unired Mine Workers union.
Washington; D.C. Both union and
The union .ancJ a newly formed industry spokesmen declined 10

· EAST

WEST ,
+KJ 3

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Coal group .announces start of contJ;act·talks

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9:00 C2J e

UNDeR "THe TITLI=
" FATHEAD OF "THE:

Vol. 27, No. ~~
·
CoPr'18hied 1112 .

+KJ 73

(Season Premiere) Jake and
Holowachuk share an
Qa~en~, (PI 2 of 2) Stereo.

MORTY MEEKLE

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·

Along the river ........,..... Bl-8
Business/Farm ...............Dl-8
Classifi~ ....................... D2-7
Deaths............................... A-3
~ EdltOfal ............................A-4
Sports.........- ...................c l-8
Weather............................A-2·

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UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO 'GET ANSWER

NORTH

-··

Inside

. Meigs Historical Society will
·meet today- Bob Hoeflich B-2

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
. .

BRIDQE

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.

Anne Bailey's hunting days
are recalled- James Sands -A-8

B-1

.U s

~~&amp;ll1
. St~~Week
Stereo.
llii liD .e Major Dad

HAD TO STAY
IN AFTER
SCHOOL FER
ACTIN' UP

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ScRAM-LETS ANSWIRS

8Croullre .
1111 Maniac Manelon Q •
8:00 C2J 8 l!2l Fllllll Appea~ From
the Fllea of Unaolved . ·
Myaterlea An Investigation of
a·auspect In the death of a
security g~ar~. Stereo. Q
(J) MOV(E: Children nt a
Lauer GqciiR) (2:00)
Iilia (I) 8 Family Mattera .
Carl becornee jealoils -of
Harriette's au~
. ve · ano
'
teacher. Stereo.
CZJ W waahl
.Week In
R..lew Stereo. .D
.
l!lliiD. ~ Goiifen Palace
Stereo.
:
. (!]) I) A ance'a Moat
Wanted Aman's obsession
with a 15-year-old girl .leads
him Ill kidnap her. Stereo. Q
1!J Murder, She Wrote Q
121 Crook and ChiN
8 PrimaNewa D
. .
. 1111 MOVIE: Howto Frama 1
. Flgg·(2:00)
1:05(1) Allin.the Femur
· .1:25(1) MaJOr t:oiague Ba~belf
.
.San Diego Padres at Atlanta
· Braves (q
·
8:30 C2J 8 0 What Happened?
The crash of a ·cc-1o In
Bostoni en illxploslon on
_ • ~rd the USS 'Iowa. Stereo.
(l5 G lil e Step by Step
Oesplte carol's misgivings,
Frank enters a daring

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· Suckle : Gloat • Oough ' Weekly ·CLOTHES ·
E)eing tlte mother of four boys I've ob$8rved that the
greatest period of growth for a child, is the month alter
you've purchased an new schoOl CtOTHES.
·

7:30 C2J • 0 Jlclpli""'
· !..1:1 '
(J) 1be JeHeraona t;~_:
lilG E.-lnmjlnt Tonight
Stereo. Q ·
, ·
(I) 8 You Bat·Your Life
l1ll G Wheel of Fortune Q
018 Family Feud
Melor Leailue llaaeball

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Badgers upset No. 12 -Bucks 20-16. .. C-1 ·

Sternwheel
festival to
· begin Oct. 9

V by fill.ing in ,the_ mi$Sing wordS:
L-.J.....-1.-L-...1-....1.--'- you develop from step N&lt;&gt;. 3 below.

~2:n
. L,
T~nlght·
Stereo.
'
1111 8'9 Brother Jake Q

.YoRE BOY LESTER

NUFTI

. ~ ~ng Women ·
Stereo.
.
. . lilG In clll l!dtll1111 Q
CD W Mai:~hrar
NeftllourQ
.
(I) e Merrltld ... With
.. ;'~~i'dytD .· .
(!]) 18 Star Trek: ffie Next
~

Ttie PAC.j(.

;.1

·I. a

.•
.
lllll'llllfl My DOg
7:00 lij ~ IIJI WhMI ~~ Fortuna

~'--'J• ! L01&lt;4't~&amp;p. f~l'llt.

H.E NLAI

Ir--:-,__.,....---..--·-,
I

'

toi,_ a.

l!llG Ill 8 CIS Newa
tiJ)
AOIHnne Stereo.

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"WhBt beautiful children you
1-·-TO;_.:,V..:A.;,.·.,-R_L,·r.-1 . have." gushe&lt;l the eash~er.
: 1 . 14
N•
'
'Thank you.' I beamed feeling .
I• 1-'-·
'--""·-.L·
........___._ · 'very smug until the cashier
added; "They must take alter
I T GE L
their ___ ,_,. ·.
.
1--,I;;;...;TI·"".-·.lr'1-lc'·5"'1'.:--1 A .Co.;,p;;,te. the chuckle . quoted

DMolcwMd

w•

AAOO~UO A~VlliiUCii

form· fQur simple worda.

. I 1• I I

.

lil • Aac
CD Wid Amertca Sl!!,eo. t;1

. i~ YOU OOAl'f AAOWf
TO M&gt;YfHI~. t DOt;&gt;'f

•.

iho
be-

lil •

IZIWofldToday
1111 Prince vau.nt
8:30(2)8 ONICNewaD
(J) (d MCMalal'a Sill( ·
ilulcll··

II= YOU WISH TO
EX4.MINE 1T MORE

0 four
Roarron;o !ellen of
ocromblod words
lOw to

08 IIJ,.....

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75 n~nts

Sunday

TIAT.tAILY

·FRI .. OCT. 2 . . •
e:iJo C2J •

AUfAENTIC

.

l

Ohio

,.CROOTeR ~­

THIS 15 AN

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FOR '' SHOW AND
TELL " TODAY C
HAVE BROUGHT
. THIS LEAF ..

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Pomeroy Middleport Galllpolla, OH Point Pleasant, wv

l Tol~l68" I

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PA .

. IMansfield !sgo I•
IND.

W.VA.

GALLIPOLIS - The Galli lis Allllalld mu ilured
.
Police ])eplnmeot in~ve
An As bland, Ky. man was
accidents Friday wbich resulted in injUred Friday af1emoon following
a total of three inj~es.
.
· a two-car accident on Eastern
•.
Avenue.
Two iajured iD accldeat
According to lhe 1tp011, Neil C.
Russ Elliot, 41, and Susan Lovelace, 41, Sellars Street; AsltElliot, 38, both of Jackson,Pfte, land, Ky., was taken to Holzer
Gallipolis, were taken to Holzer Medical Center. A hospital
Medical Center where they ·were ~pokesperson said there was no
treated and released following an mformation available on Lovelace.
accidt:nt ~ri~ay evening on First
According to the · report,
~venue ~thm the Sycamore Street Lovelace Will! northbound on~~mlers(ctton.
.
em Avenue when he stopped m
According to the report, a vehi· traffic .and was sll'Uct ~behind
cle driven by Mark A. Long, 35, by a vehiCle driven by ~ul F. Dill;
Jerry's Run Road, Pliny, W.Va. 37,U.S.33,Pomeroy.
.
· was soUihbound on First Avenue ·
Dill was cited for failure to
when he went left of center and maintain an assured clear distanCe.
struck tl!e vehicle driven by Mr. Damage to Dill's vehicle was listed
Elliot.
· .
as light and Lovelace's vehicle sus···A ',or drivmg
. Ieft ta.10~ d mo dcrate· d. amage.
.
Bo th
Lo.ng was Cl~
of center. Damage to. Long's vehi· vehicles were dnven from the
cle was listed as moderate and dis- · · scene.
,
abling and Elliot's vehicle sus· .
lain~ heavy damage. Both vehi- Polic:e probe acddent
·
ctes wen: towed from the scene.
· Police were also called to the
scene o{ another ai:cideni on East•
·

. . ~o citations wen: issued~ no
Accccdingro lhe 1tp011, vehicles . mJune~ were reported. ~tatls of
dri\'en by Mart s. McCoy, 43, .. lhe ac~!dent \\'ere not available at
. Eureka Sbjr Roure, GaUiiJO)is, and press lliiiC.
.
.
Tammy Lynn Qecrge; Ke11y Drive, .
..
Gallipolis, ""Were northbound on Youth. causes ~·~at
.
·Eastern /.venue when McCoy
Police also mvesbgaled 11!1 ~·st~pped for traffic' at the Ohio · ·dent on Fourth 1yeouc mvolvmg a
· Rtver Plaza intersection and four-year ~ld ~eft m a parlced car.
. ~e slnlek him from behind~ No
J\ccordmg to the. report, Gates
mrunes were reponed and no cita- .Pe01ck, ·no .ag~ g1ven, fourth
· lions were issued. Both vehicles Avenue, GallipoliS, parked m front
su.stained light damage and were of.French Town Ap~f!IDents and
driven from lhe ~ene.
. ex1~ the velucle, leavmg Yev.eue
Pen~. 4, FO!'flh Avenue, ballipoPolice lavestil!ale th.ree-car lis,m the Vehicle.
· ·.
.
wftdl:
Yevette .PI!t the veh1cle 10
Police were called to a three car reverse and 1t ttavele(l. 273 1{2 feet
. accident on Second AVenue (Slate . nort~ on Fourth Av~nue bef~re
Rou1e .7) Friday night According strikinJI a ~ked vehicle occ~pied
to the re~t, vehicles driven by by .Clara o~s. no age g1ven,
Gary L·
e• 39• RL. 2 Gallipo- Main
Street,then
Poml
Pleasant,
Wdrive
·Va.
Yevette
putlhe
car in
lis; Nancy Mooney, 49. Mooney and ttave· led 173.7 feet before leav·
. Road, Crown Ci.ty and Matthew 'E.
Wear, zs, Cherry Hill R'oad,
ing the left side of the road and
Wheeling, W.Va., all sustained striking a tree·. No injuries were
light 10 moderate damage and were reported and no citations were
driven from the 5cene.
issued. Damage to J&gt;enict's vdlicle
·
was listed as heavy and it remaii)Cd

,- c::::1J/~atrol reports
six injured in area accidents
.

CI1992Accu-WMiher,lnc.

Weather
Monday and Tuesday, fair.
Soutb·Ceatral Ohio
Lows
45 to 50 and highs 65 to 75.
.
• Sunday, mostly sunny. High
Wednesday,
a chance of showers..
• around 70 to 75.
Lows·around 50 and highs in the
: ExteDded b-east:
,&gt;- p
middle 60s.
: . !'tfOOday through Wedllesday:

..
.j Andrew after dark:
~ Strip joints, s~ray cats
.

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GALLIPOLIS' - The Gallia- Patrollavestiptaacddeat
Meigs Post of the State Hi~hway
Troopers also investigated an
Patrol investigated six accld(\nts accident on State Route 1 in Clay
Friday which resulted in a rotal of ·Township in Gallia County Friday
six injuries.
afternoon .. According to lhe report,
a vehiCle driven by Kathleen E.
Two injured iD S.R. ?wreck .
ThompSon, 73, Second Avenue,
Two persons were ttansported.to Gallipolis struck from behind a
Pleasant Valley Hospital Friday vdlicle driven by Donald R: Chapnigllt by Gallia County Emergency man, 24, RL 1 Northup.
. ·. .
Medical Service following a two- ·
Both vehicles were northbOund
car accident on State Route 7 near on S.R. 7 when Chapman slpwed to
the U.S. 35 eastbound entrance make a left hand turn and was
· ramp in Gallipolis.
sll'UCk from behind.
Gena L. German, 18, E~n
No citations were issued and no
Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va., and injuries were reported. Damage 10
Mary J. Alkinson, 36, North Park • Chapman's vehicle was listed as
Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va., were light and damage to Thompson's
lrealedandreleased that night Ger" vehicle was listed as moderate.
man was one of the drivers in the Both vehicles were driven from the
accident and Atkinson was a pas- scene.
·
~e~ser in a vehicle driven by
Bobby L. Alkinson, 36, North Park Accident reported oa S.R.l60
Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
A similar accident occurred that
No citations were issued. Both
cars sustained moderate damage
and were towed from the .scene.
Details of the accident were
unavailable ai press time.

. : HOMESTEAD. f18. (AP) -Lt.
Despite the calm, Watson and
· • tal. Jim Watson's 38th straight three members of the Guard don
night on patn&gt;l in the Hurricane buDelploof vests .and be1mels each
Andrew di~ter area bqan with night ahd asaemble in a tent pitched
his usual visillll Piggy's Lounge.
in front of a police station. A card.•. The lounge is 11 makeshift sttip board sign there reads: "Macho
;.joint with dirty cement floors.~- Doem't Work Here. We Need To
. ·ticle board rtmways and a gralliti- Posture Ourselves As A Gentle
"3pattered entrance promising Giant"
·
... :.'Girls, Girls, Girls."
After more th.an five weeks of
. .• The sirl on 511&amp;C this night was patrolling the ravaged and often
.•.• : haggaril woman. T.he patrons deserted neighborhoods, the solmostly WClC construcuon workers · diers are all too familiar with
drawn to one of the oilly·nighl.spols AndreW aft« dark.
.
Three iD,jured OB C.R. .f6
.10 reopen along this stretch of
Where dayliglit tends to blur lhe
1895
Three persons were injured Fri·
·~ Highway sinCe tbe Aug. 24 magnitude .of the devastation, the
day af~i'll'&amp;n in 'ail accident on ·
~ · ·
spotli;.ts lhey direct out each side County
Road 46 in Perry Township
QQfl"l(IM
:•.' W811011 and a small detachment oflbeirHumveedissectil
in
Oallia
Coully.
Tmcy
A.
Stump,
•If the Flcxida National Guard crash
On this patrol, the lights caught
OUfiRTE~
Rt .. I Cheshire, was taken to
!die party each. night 10 make sure the gree~ glo": of th.e eyes of a 20,
·
Jau
like
Ylltl'ft nenr heanl
;PSggy's complies with a 9 p.m. cur- stray cat cowcnng al.op a 10-foot · Holzer Medical Center were he was
It lleforel
.
high pile of debris.·A barking dog treated and released.
.few.
·
SAT., OCT. I 0 - 1:00 P.M.
Johnny D. Colley, 23, Center!·~ A grinning Mitc!l Jordan p:ccted • circled below.
. .
Morrla' and Dcl""hy H.kln•
point
ROad,
Oak
Hill,
and
his
pas•WataoD like an old fricDd. Balding · The lights picked up tbe floral
· · Ariel Thlllltre
senger,
John
L.
Metzger,
38,
Wolfe
:,00 chally, the 37-)'ear-old manag- pattern of a red dress hanging in a
426
2nd Av8., Glllllpoll8, Oh.
Road,. Patriot, were both
4' ge11 a Irick out of wall:hing on- bedroom closet in a small sixth- Run
Caii446-ARTS
for mora Info.
~illlty soldien armed with M·l6s floor apartment. The winds had reported injured but refused treat:S,ilum as bis dancm prance by. peeled off the entire side of the ment
:-. "Thele guys arc great," JMiim building, making it look like a . According 10 the report, Col·
ley's vehicle was northbound and
:•d. "I enjoy their company ·~ giant doD bouse.
.
Stump's
vehicle was southbound
ofnd their bilsine11.''
The lights flashed on .lhe back of
on
C.R.
46.
Both vehicles were left
: •: The IICCIIC tnrified South Dade's a shinless man riding a bike down
of
center
when
lhey cleared a ~ill
:jradual entry mto ·what Watson a dark allcy in violation of curfew.
crest
and
sll'UCk
head
on.
~Is the "comfort zoae" - the . The man began pedaling furl·
No Ci!&amp;tions were issued; Both
:Vurgatoey between· disaster and ously as lhe Humvee punued. The
where the Gu.-d and cur· chase ended when he rode Sb,.llight vehicles sustained heavy damage
•faws are lfl accepted and even wei- through the 15aek door of a small and were towed from the scene.
~e part or everyday life.
. house.
.
Que IBjured Ia two-car accident
••· The Florida Guard is in the
Watson yelled. "Good night."
A Vinton woman was injured
:elidiJt of the lonaeat deployment in. ·
Friday
afternoon following a two:illbisiOry. Wbilemostorthe6,400
car accidem on Stare Route 124 in
:icate ~ II'C now home, about
Meigs County.
:~::erccierat troiJiia, members
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
Marsha M. Adkins, 32, Main
•Of the Ouard can carry loaded were no tickets sold naming all five . Street, Vlntop, was transported to
; ·
· • That mWI lbem an asaet numbers selected in Friday's Buck- Holzer Medical Center where she
Dade Police, especially at ::~.s drawing, the· Ohio Lottery was treated and released.
Accmliitg 10 lhe report. a vehi·
·6ight
PRICES
: ~; W811011,. 45, a ~ ;~- Pick 3 Numbers
cle dri,.ven by Richard W. Maynard,
2-9·9
27, Rt 1 EwingiOD, was westbound
;ay
tivefrom
,
a.
( . •.
. )
•Dnit c
wiih enforcing a' cur- ·
two, ru~~
on S.R. 124 wlien a vehicle in front
•
in
Culler Ridlc area and at Pick 4 Numucn
of him slowed ·and Maynard ~lid
·8heck
ts along U.S; ~way
l-04-l
left of center 10 avoid striting die .
~ l; So . . unit has joined m 2SO
(tluee, zero, four, one)
. vehicle. Maynard thea struck an .
eastbound vehicle dti~en by
•:.tresu. .
ted 110 weapons ~~~rt~l 33-37
ind delivered five bebiea ·
•
•.
Adkins.
;.; But the early post-hurricane
. (twelve, eljlhteen, twenty-one,
MayNrd was ciled for failure to
or near anarchy - when, the thirty-three, tlllrty-seven)
.
mainl8in· an 8SIUred clear distance.
tOuanl ballled ·a spree or lootmgs
Both vehicleS sustained moderate
· -~ sboodngs - II'C goae. Now
damage and were ·driven from the
~ey arresl one or two people a
acene.

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, COLO\) · ,
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Virginia Hartley

~S:~~a::.~w:S~:!
' COLO\) ·

lhtufr,

llli':Jit .

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F.RL lliRU lHUR.

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SIIOWIIG. t:JO

ANISSIOit $1.50

R
OlE IVIIIIIG SHOW 7:SO .

.

~11011 $1.50

446-0921

A THEATER WITH A CHOICE!
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

446 4524

:.· ; : ·

SJ.Oa AU. MA,_.. rwiOAY ~ JiMIKT
11.10 ADULT A
lf'OIIIVIMNO SMOWI
'
U.lla Clni:PSMO~ tJ.V..,._

rut.:L

J :~BUSHED

Lo,ttery numbers

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GOOD THRU OCTOBER 11

.111011.

~1,

guys

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:·: "The bad
just sot tired of .
~~::.picked up;" be ~aid.
, • •
II'C really approachmg a
~· nonnak:y as' far as we're

.

Hospital news

;!?'.;:;:
'iell."

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251b••••••••••••••••$5.49
lb••- ...........$9.59

PMr NU'IRI'I'ION
From America wder in Animal
Nutrition Since 1894!"

·-·

pormltla4 Ia
U... when IBOtar aurier
ie

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TIM ......, 11n Soollaal wtll DOt bo
1•1 . , . . . ...._...,_"'_
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Slir -tbo...,_. ...................._,,.,.~ ...M.'III

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118 .....................:.........,... "" .. ;Ua.l8

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118 w.a ........................... ._ .......... ..

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.

MIDDLEPORT • Virginia Vitat.oe Hartley, 82, 'Middleport, died Fri·
day,,OcL 2, 1992 at Riverside Methodis~Hospital ip Columbus.
·
Born Aug. 7, 1910 in Columbus, she was a daughter of the late Paul
and Canie Lticille 1ones Overturf. She was a member of the Full Gospel
Lighthouse Church in Pomeroy, and she was a minister of the gospel in
apostolic faith in the irilmediate area for many years.
She is survived by a daughter, Doris Pooler, Taylorsville, Ky.; asister,
Fanchon Overturf, Columbus; two brothers, Gerald Ovenurf, Rutland,
and Walter Shy, Columbus; five grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her flfst husband,
Elijah Vitatoe in 1974, and tier second husband, Robert Hartley in 1980;
and two brothers, Johnny and Francis Overturf.
.
Services wiD be Tuesday at 1 ·p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middle- 1
port with Pastor Ro)' Hunter officiating. Burial will be in ·Gravel Hill
Cemetay in Cheshire.
·
Friends may call at the funezal ~~eon Mon~y from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

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.

GALLIPOLIS - Robin Daniels, Nebo Road Pattiot, told deputies
two male subjects forced their way into his residence early Friday
morning when he answm:d lhe door.
The subjects ransacked the residence, threw Daniels' telephones
out in the yard,urinated on the furniture and broke into a gun cabi_.
net and SIOie three guns.
·
.
.

Woman reports assault
· CHESHIRE • Kim Rhodes, State Route 7, Cheshire, told
deputies that ber son was attacked Friday night in lhe parking lot at
River VaJJcy High School by some male subjects. When she
· attempted to stop the fight, one of the subjects bent her hand baclc,
' causing it to swell The subjects fled when Rhodes sent someone to
fmd a deputy.

Deputies probe criminal damaging

~.~~

good-naiured competition is good," shi said We didn't
intend fer it to be one-sided.
. .Hopkins said 'he rec.eived several ·calls from county residents
uruated over die decorauons and that they were all apparendy salis·
fied with her explanation.
"
"We don't want to fuellhe fires of rivalry,"Hopkins said.
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Miller, DeWine plan open sessions

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Trick or Treat Night set

a mal,e subject cut her phone line early Saturday morning.

Juveniles taken into custody

Life chain event today

G~LIS. FoUowing a brief pursuit Friday night, Gallipolis
P.Olice apprehended two juveniles in a vehicle who were seen throwing eggs at parlced cars on Fourth Avenue. The juveniles were uans-

''

· GALLIPOPS.- Repre~ntatives from the offices of Congressman Clarence Miller and Lieutenant Governor Mike DeWine have
•
· scheduled an open door session to meet with citizens in Gallipolis.
Miller's representative will be in town from 11 to 1 p,m. Oct. 6
and DeWine's representative will be here from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m.
OcL 8. Both meetings wiU take place in the Gallia County Court·
house.
·

GALLIPOLIS - · Halloween Trick or Treat Night for Gallipolis
and the Bidwell-Porter area will be from 5:30 p.m. to 6 :30 p.m.
OcL 29 for children 12 years of age and younger.

BIDWELL- Linda Peck, Vale Street, BidweU, told 'deputies that

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GALLIPOLIS- Christians from Mason and Gallia Counties will .;
fonn a "chain of life" froin 2:30 to 3:30p.m. today at the Gallipolis
city ~ to peacefully demonstrate against abortion. R~gisttation
L---::--~-----·-------------and-·li_ne_assem
__b..;Iy_i_sa_t_2,;.,p.m_._ _. - - - · _ _ _ _ _,.....1

Sena·te'' House meet ove.r
Two campers burglarized
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.· In rive to a JOUrn . CROWN CITY' · Two campers dow out of his. 1982 Royal CoachWASHINGTON (AP) _Eager . own expense.
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parked on Stare Route 7 in Crown man camper and stole an AM/FM
to Wlllp up bus_iness for tbe year.
With Bush threatening another City
were reported broken into stereo and James D. O'Neil, Maple
Con11ress met m a .rar~ weeke~d veto, sponsors put that provision recently.
Drive, Barboursville, W.Va.,
sess.•on Saturday to. fmish remam- mto a separate bill. Its passage
reported that someone broke· ihe
·
din bill and or1t ard
Floyd Wilmouth, Riverside wmdow out of his 1983 Regal
111gspen g s . w tow
wouldlikelyprovokeanotherpresicompromises on taxes and abor- dential veto.
Drive, Henderson, W.Va. reported Camper and stole a tool box and \n
lion.
.
. Bush has vetoed legisiation 35
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that someone broke the front win- AM/FM stereo,
,_
House S~&gt;Caker Thomas Foley limes without bein¥ overridden·
"
retreated a bit from his Monday tar· nine of those vetoes mvolved llbor:
get for adjournment but said he still lion. .
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home.
expec!S the 102nd ~orwess. to end
Anoth~r abortion-related fight
early m lhe :week., I ~It looks , was brewmg in the Senate -on a
•,
good for Tuesday, he.said.
bill that would ease the Bush
GALLIPOLIS • Herbert Stanley, Jr., 60."Raccoon Road, Gallipolis,
.Both the House and Senate con- administration's ban on m~dical
. d F 'da Oc be 2 992 . th Ch I
Ar
. al C
sidered a major defense bud'et bill research using tissue from aborted
d1e n Y• to r • I
m e ar eston · ea Medtc
enter ~d· a $245 billion appropnations fetuses. The Senate voted a day
Memori.lil Division. He was a fOJmer resident of Kayford, W.Va. and has btU for the departn\ents or Labor, earlier 10 revive the issue and limit
resided. in Gallipolis for \he ·last 10 years~ He was a self-employed Educ:ation and Health an~ Human debate, but delaying tactics by
mechanic and a meinber of the Kayford.Baptist Church.
ServiCes and related agenc1es.
opponents left in doubt whether the
He was preceded in deatli by a special loved orie, Mable Triplett; his
Meanwhile, President Bush on bill would come to a vote before
father, Hertlert Stanley, Sr; one brother, Norman Stanley and one sister, , Saturday vetoed. lelrislation which Con.,....•'ad;oums for the year.
Christine Hackney.·
· ld h
"'I ted govern- Bush
o-- "
Survivors include his moth'er, E.lla Stanley of Dawes, w.Va; one . wou
ave remsll u
and other anti-abortion
daughter, Karen Jarrell of Gallipolis; two step daughters. Phyllis Fife of ment regulation of the cable telcvi- forces contend the reSearch would
GaJfipolis and Peggy PhilliiJs of Fox Lake, Ill; five step sons, Timmy sion industry, arguin¥. that ~ bill enco~e abortions, and say tissue
lki f Galli li B h ·
. 'll
G
was an example of good mten- from llllsearriages should be used.
E ns o
po s, utc Tn~;&gt;lett of GallipoliS, B1 . and eorge Triplett lions ~ne. wrong."
Supporters of the bill dispute that
of Crown City and Dennis Tnplett of Bloomingdale, Ga; five brothers,
.Major.•ty L.eader . George assertion and say such tissue holds
Earl Stanley of Leewood, W.Va., Kenneth Stanley of Flint Mich.. Carl M h 11 D M
ds
Stanley of Dawes, W.Va. and Gary Stanley of Clio, Mich; four sisters,
nc e • • ame, sal enate promise for many medical cures,
Maxine Noble of Beckle\vW.Va.,l.ela Mae RusseD of Slrongville, Char· would conduct a veto override vote and that miscarriages don't provide
v
dC · R
f Q · WV
on Monday night The bill passe4 enough tissue.
.
,
Iol!e S11111mers of N'
· ttro, · a. an aro1 usse11 0 uamer, · a; two both the House and Senate by marBut Foley said that Bentsen and
grandchildren, 15 step grandchildren and seven ,step great grandchildren.
gins sufflCiendy large 10 overturn a Rostenkowski were "proceeding in
· Friends may call from 6 to 9 e.m. Sunday at the Pryor Funeral Home veto.
good order" in their tax talks.
in East Bank, W.Va. Services will be held 1 p.m. Monday at the fryor
Also still to be decided was a
Both lhe House and Senate verFunersl Home Chapel with the Revs. BiD 'and Janice WiUiums officiilting. major tax biD. The House and Sen· sions include tax incentives to
Burial will be in the Kanawha Valley Memorial Gardens in Glasgow, ate have PllSSC'! diff~g Versions, attract businesses into depressed
and a comprollllse was m the han~ inner cities and ·rural areas. The
W·Va.
of House Ways and ~eans Chm- Senate's $35 billion bill, nearly
•man Dan R&lt;&gt;Ste!Jkowski,D-D.l., and twice the size of the House's, also
the Senate Fmance ChBlrman seeks to expand Individual RetireLlo~d Bentsen, P-Texas, who met . ment Accounts. and make other
behind
losed ckxXs. .
.
AJsocawaiting House and Senate changes.
floor attention was a compromise - - - -,- - - - - - -..
energy bill- the most far-reach~ ·
.
oHoapll.t hell
....lent Lilli
oChun·• Dl8pera
ing rewrite of America:s energy
'
oGoWnl
•WhMic:hlllra
o&amp;.an.woor
policy in t5 years. The bm. among
o$telhOKOpel
-Feeding
P11mp1
oOuoderm
othec thjngs, would eDCOUf11$C the
oQitOmy
•AirMellrn•TENS Unlll
development ·of'more energy-effi·
T.-peza
o8.:k8111CU
oJciblt Stoeklnga
cient lightbulbs and lamps and
~4 Hour Emergeney S.VIctt
mwn~~tolicenseandb~
nuclear
power plants.
oAIIIJIII'IIory "J:henipilt !In Stall
The .com promise defense bill
•W•
do the lnauranee billing for the pltlent
. provides a $274.3 billion Pentagon
GALLIA
COUNTY
oMolt • - covered by Medk:tlra
budget for the coming year and
-s ..... Renutl· S.n.'tc. .
.c uts more than $1 billion from
JUNIOR
President Bush's lliiJuest for devel·
FAI,IROUNDS
DP."'enl of lhe Star WllfS .anti-misSile dcfe~se, Sdting the spending
GALLIPOliS, OHIO
level at just over S4 billion.
·
.To win . the bill, sponsors .
9·10·11
removed 1 provision that has trig· 1..00o4SNI44'
"HOURS: IAM·6 PM
WEARING THEIR COLORS • Gallia Academy Hlgb School
gered veto fights in the past -:-lao3nl &amp; Pi• St.
446-7213.
students Jay Lambert, Jas.oa Castor' and Chuck Plymale display
guagc J!Cf1nilling military pe_sonnel
245·5347
their school spirit Friday afternnoa wlth race paints bdore the
and dcpmdents 10 get abortions at
River Valley • G11.llia Academy football 1ame. (Times.:Sealillel
overseas miliay IKispitals, at thed
photo by KeviD PiDSOII)
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Brown's ·Trustworthy
_Hardware
St. It• 160 • lhl•ll, OH. ·

' (614) 446·8828

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HOMECARI MEDICI' SUPPLY

· OCT.

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No.olil&gt;ocrtpll- by 011110

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reported dama~.

BOWMAN'S

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·Special Prices Also On Purina
· Rabbit·and Dog Chow!

\

· · · GALLIPOLIS - Erma Adkins, Park Lane, Gallipolis, told
. deput_ies that 9CJ!IICODC ~e a window at her residence early Friday
mormng and ttied to gam eollllllce. A stonn door screen was also

.sao·w

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VETERANS ~ORIAL
FRIDAY
ADMISSIONS:
has followed.
' Emma McCiiDIOCk, Racine; Ronald
•=· "I q,uit ·smokingiS years ago Jeffers, Pomeroy.
iftd now I've 111i1ed apin," WatFRIDAY
DISCHARGES:
{Da aald .. "My wife is mad as None.

Deputies probe attempted B&amp;E

AND GUN

PURINA SUNFLOWER .
·\
.SEED
"4

or

· GALUPOLIS • Turley Clagg, Shaffer SchoOl Road, Gallipolis,
rold .Gallia County sherifrs deputies that someone l(lre doWn his
mailbox between Friday evening and Saturday morning.

FRENCH 500 •
FLEA MARKET

PURINA . BIRD CHOW

25 lb-~......~...$3.79
- .50 lb~-~....- .....$6.49

.;bys

Mtiilbox vandalized

.

. GALLIPOLIS - Some Gallipolis business leaders ar~ .taking
heat over recent window decorations by GaJiia Acailemy High .
School cheerleaders:
Gallipolis merchants allowed GAHS cheerleaders 10 decorate ·
their windows with sloganS' promoting a Friday-night football victory over new rival River Valley High School. The decorations soon
met with cjisapproval from several county residents. .
·
· Lynne Hopkins, 'president of lhe Gallipoijs Retail Merchants
Association, said merchants want to set the record straight
The decoration was done by cheerleaders and not die merchants
themselves, Hopkins said. The chee,leaders approached lhe businesses and asked pennission to decorate the windows. - the merchants agreed.
.
RVHS cheerleaders have die same opportunity if they ask to dec- .
orate windows, Hopkins said. We would have saved some space,

Herbert Stanley' J...

:.avery

:r=

Window decoration~ explained

Man, reports vandalism, theft .

· roooPLEASANT-FioraMayMcKinney,9S,ofPointPleasant,ilied
: Friday, October 2,.1992, at Care Have~. of Point Pre&amp;$81lt following a long
· illness.
~
Born May 31, 1894 in CottageviUe, she was a daughter of the late Char- ·
les and Nellie (Ankrum) Kay. She was a member of the Bellemead United
Methodist Church.
She was also preceded in death by her.husband, Burlwell S.Purlock Me·
Kinney; a son, an infant daughter, four brothers, tWO SISterS and a
granddaughter.
·
·
Survivors include three daughters, Mrs. Okey (Mary) Keefer of Point
Pleasant, Kathryn. Neal of Leon and Zelda Bernard of Girard, Ohio; two
sisters, Leoliil Roach of Middleport and AJma Riggs of Point Pleasant; a
sister-in-law, Rosie Atwood of Florida; 23 grandchildren and several
great-grandchildren, great·gre&amp;\·grandchildren and great-great-greatgrandchildren.
'
Service will be Monday, October.5, at 1:30 p.m. at the Wilcoxen
~
" Hatli ld d Min
Funeral Home, Point Pleasan~ with Rev. William Bud
e an
•
ister Elmer Fanner officiating. Burial wiD be in SuncreSt Cemetery, Point
~~g· hours will be Sunday from 24 p.m. and. 7-9 p.m ..at the funeral

PET SEMETARY II

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pOrted to the police slalion, where they were later released to the.ir
.
parents.
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:Flora May McKinney

FRI., SAT., SUN. .

OIIIIVIIIIIG SHOW t:JO

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. POMEROY • William Thomas Evans,. 65, of Marieua Road in June'
lion City, died on Friday, October 2, 199~ 81 hi$ fC$idence.
·
. H.e was born on Jan1181Y 26, 1927 in ~ng Bottom, son of the late
Everette and Nora Wallace Evans. He was a laborer, a veteran or the U.S .
Anny during World War II and a member of the VF.W. Post 9053 in
Tuppers Plains. · . ·
·
·
.
Surviving are four blildlers: Raymond Evans, Racine, Harold Evans of
Long Bottom, Paul Evans, Racine, and Noiman Evans, Portland; four sisterS: Minnie Pullins, Mineral City, Ohio, Della Coleman, Reedsville. and
Ruth Ann Long and Janet Lunger, both of East Liverpool; .and several
nieces and nephews.
.
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· ·Besides ·his parents, he was preceded in death by his brother, Donald
Evans, and his sister, Virginia Evans.
'
Services will be held on Monday lit 2 p.m: at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with Rev. David Dailey officiating. Burial wiU be in Chester
Cemetay.
.
.
·
Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 5 to 8 p.m.
Graveside rites will be conducted by the Tuppers Plains VFW.

'

Sunday nmee Sentlnel_,.._.\3 . ·

deaths ·.- -

William Evans

.away.

afternoon on State Route 160 in
Green Township, Gallia County.
According to th.e report, Helen
Cooper, 60, Race · Street,
Coatiaued on A.(i

Pomeroy-Middleport Gelllpolla, OH..:...Polnt Pleasant, wv

-~
·· Area

ern Av~ue Friday. .

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October 4, 1992

Police report three injured in ar~a ac.cidents

OHIO Weather

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October 4, 1992

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Gallipolis firemen
'
respond to gas lea)\
GALUPOLIS • The Gallipolis
Volunteer Fire Department was
called Friday morning to a propane
g~ leak at the residence of .Vesta
Hamm, Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis. The 12 fire fight~rs who ·
responded lW'IIe(J the tank off and
. discoMected the li11,e. Hamm and
an unidentified man were treated
for gas inhallti011. It was the !85th
call of lhe year
&lt;t
·

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· ~ detiiu:tment als!&gt; .respOiided
• to a falle alarm early this !JIOnllng.

. Car4inal' Drycleaners

BOWLING SEMINAR .

'446·9495 ·'

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:Winter
:Coats '·
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By Professional Bowl~ Steve Lickliter

OHer
Ex phs
10/11/92

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-PICK ·IP IND.DEUYIRY IYIIUIL.,;_
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Sunday, Oct. 4
11:00 A.M.

I

; ~~ID::t'&amp;.';.~ . ...
'lion, Bob McCormick Road, Gal;
lipolia. 1! wu thO !86th call of lhe
year. •
.

SKYLINE LANES IS HOSTING A

,l

Advanced ReglstratJ.n Advised · .~
·$20 FEE,.;~ Lunch'lnclqded! · ·.

SKYLINE LANES ·''

STATE IT~ 7 IIORTH • lALLI POLlS
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Comment~ry

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OH-Potnt Pleasant,

arid perspective

October 4, 1992
Page-A4

Christian ·coa~i.tion :~ets si2hts ~on · Mo~tana
sC:at.

WASHINGTO~ - Wben 12·
year-old Errol R1ce cam~ bo~e
from sc
. hool one. ~ last spnng, his
~o. ther handed. h1m a letter from
h1s congressman. Though she
assumed it was a c!&gt;ngratulatory
note for a class proJeCt, the letter
from Rep. Ron Marlcnec, R-MonL,
turned out to be ''more pornograp!Jic than anything my child has
•
ever been exposed to."
· Marlene,e churned out ovc:r
10,0&lt;!0 cop1es of the letter
. to hiS
cons~J:tuents at ~~yer expense. It
con~':""' ~npbons of sexUally
exJ?bCJt proJCCIS that he say_s arc
bemg funded by the Npuonal
Endowment for the Arts.
·•
. But Marlencc ~ no apologJes to thef~md1es that '!'.ere
?,ffended by h1s ~-raled mBlling.
·If-the lc~ fell tnto the hands of
some families that,were u~t, that
was exacdy .the pomt," a. Marie~
spokesperson told us. "These: fam1hes should be.upseL But w1th the
message,~ the messenger."
.
. Marlcnee s current flght.to Slay
m Congress has tauiht R1c~ B!ld
others ~ exl!B-curncular c1v1cs
.class lesson m the ways of Pat
•

Rob~son s msul'gent Chnst1an
C.oabbon. J!.obertson has deploy~
h1s forces to defeat Marlenee s
N_ovember opponent, Rep. Pat

.

BusJt campaign winds up
~riving · debate strategy

By Jack

and ·

Michael Binstein

"'
§

•Jbne IIIUUOI..ua
~ Ointoo aiJb bad insisted that any debate bargaining be. done publicly,

~~the bipartlsan·debate commission, finally yielding on both. points.

'• . 1'llele haven't been four TV' debates in a presidential campaign since

:111e first such meetings, between 1ohn F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon,
:1!1 1960. Those debaiCS were held between Sept. 26 and Oct. 13, ending
·)lonl than two weeks before elec.tion day.
;. ThiS lineup will be more inlense- scant margin foi eiror and little

:ilme to recoup if something goes wrong on Camera. That's n.·sky. But for

•:••ush.EDITOR''S
the biuest risk would .be staying puL
:
·
NOTE- Waller R. Mean, vice pretldeat and colum;alllt for The Auoclated Preu, has, reported oa Washington aad
~~ pollda for

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_.e thaD 25 years.

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Berry's World
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F.:

WHS ROY-"~TY • 1991 Wallama Homecoming Queea Shari Fields lllsbo.n ei'OWIIIDg
Leah ObliDger, dau&amp;hter ol ~te aDd Ellzebeth ·
Oblinger of New: Havea, 1!1!11 Homecomia&amp;.
Queea. OhUa1er's escort, Crall Roush, son ol
,

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OHIO

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c ircuitry-up to 7 days and easy·to-read backlit
buttons.

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BOB'S
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Which college is b~st ,for .y our kids? :~

"

whose comments were echoed
by .House. Speaker Vern Riffe, D-

Fam"•ly Plann"•n·g
It M k

a

"'""'

8rni :

nab,

•
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·
, by Vomov1ch fa blocking his proDemocrat BiU Ointon told Ohio income in research and develop· am 1 going to.get the money for llOSals, said the ~i~s ~sed in part
voters that they have.been "sucker- ment into new technologies and college?"
_
because the admm1strauon cooper. punched'· by Ptesldent Bush, while shaJ'1ng those~ ICChltologies and
a former Ross Perot supporter tummg them into jobs."
debated whether to sue over what
Outside the gym, a group of
he claims were credit ·checks of aboUt 25 Bush supporters demon- .. ·
·.
• voluilleers.
$lr8led agalnsr the -Arkansas gover- . .
~· s
Meanwhile Friday, Ohio Sen. nor. The group wore rubber duck . . ·
. 0 8$ 8ft$8•••
Howard Metzenbaum said in noses and blew duclc whistles.
Washington that Ohio's vacant fed"He's ducked e~ing,'' said
Confidential Services:
era! judgeships are on the line in Sandy Nelson, an Ohio St,aiC UniBirth Control
the November election.
versity student. who was wearing a
V 0 Screening
In, Toledo, Clintoo as1ced voters duck outfit. "He's ducked the
• '
to "tell Bush ... you sucker· issues. He's ducked the drafL He's
c;ancer Screening
punched us once and w.e 're not a failed governor from a failed
Pregnancy Testing
.fallin$ for it again. Go away."
state."
.
Cl.mton breakfasled w1th laidIn Toledo, wOrkers ·told Clinton
Sliding '" salt. No one refused s.Vke~ because of lnabdlty to pay.
off workers and spoke to a crowd . they cannot afford to go back to
outside an unemployment office school for retraining, cannot find
·before rallying students and others affordable child care and may lose
later in the day at .Wright State thCir medical benefits. · .
OF~ soiJTHEASTERN
University in Fairborn.
•
· Doug Funseu, 42, who is laid·
"There is no I'C8S&lt;It to despair if off from ~ Hospital, where he
MIDDLEPORT
GALLIPOLIS
we have the cOiirage to change,'' was. an adminiStrator, told Clinton
509 S. 3rd Ave.
414 Secollll Ave., 2nd Floor
Clinton told about 2,000 people at he is worried about his children,
the Wright State rally; . ·
ages 5 and 9.
992-5912
4.46·0166
"We have too many ~le who
"We're basically holding on,"
8:30 to S:OO Monday-Friday . 8:30 to S:OO Monday·Friday
are (eft out and left behind, princi- he said. "I'm trying·to maintain a
Closed JL..rsday
8:30 to 12 Saturday
pally in inner cities and isolated positive attillldC for the kids. In the
Closed Tltursday
rural areas~" Clinton said. "And wee small hours of•the night, I
we don't invest •.. as mJK;h as,our · worry about health in~ how
· ALSO: Ja~son, Chesapeake, Alhens, Chdlkothe, Logan &amp; McArlllllr
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Fred W. Crow .

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~.

. .
Ralph aad SbeUa Roull of New Havea, looks
oa. The erowaiDi took place duriag halftime
eerem~alai ollbe Wahama-Van footbaU game
Friday Dlgbt.

Clin. ·ton tells Ohz.·oans they ~~~~~·Ar:~f~~~-~i==
·
,
b
'
·
k
·
h
d'
.h ave een sue erpunc e . .~:~;~hasbeencriticized

Rupe, aS you know, our be.loved
How do you account for the fact vmced the enure rosier that he. was · rut;~ in the ninth inning? Mercy:' ·
tha th Reds ledth 1eagu 10
·
h
E
D'bbl tariCd mercy, was Dibble ever mad: He .
Reds did a turnaround after the All-·
t e
·
e
e bust· 1.e "!anager. ven 1 e s
tore up his old timer's uniform in ·
Star break this year. Prior to that ed saves? At last report there were p1tch1~g better after the so called disgusL
.•
time the R~ were approximately 26 of them. In several of t!Je games wrli5tl1~g bou.t ,~curred. Unfortu·
Ru~, do you recall the n'!\f
· ht
six games
natelyen:ome
It was several
too laiCgames
m the loSt
~n
that Dl. ble threw one P•··~h
d ahead
be hofd'Atlanta
f and
h
too
b
,.. to ou
acppearpl'onsehipt~ of theeaWiesternngor01!v1.e
p~; management llvy the wayy Moisee in Montreal? Brother, Aiou •
ham
•
,.,.
·
· ' la!ocled a 100 mph fast ball out or:.
sion o(theNational League. .
R~pe, do you remember · the the parlc. This time Dibble looked ·
However, an injury 10 Tom Lou ordered intentional passes episode of Jun Le~land, mana~er like he had been struck by lightBrowning hurt the Reds as he was given to opposjng baiters. Later ~f thefil~~gh irat~e~g . ning. Oile thing for Dibble, he·cera successful pitcher. Browning won. these batters would score when one
arry on m no once
.s tainly makes the games interesting.
despite
the
fact
that
this
writer
of
the
0""""
.
"lion
'
would
hit
a
hom.e
that
he
was
the
manager.
This
could never understand why Later
.,.,,_.
event occurred on national TV arid His
h wildness together with pitching .
on ifi;uries 10 Hal Morris and espe- run. Lou should know from expen- no one incl!Jding Bonds ever qucsorne run balls can make a lead ·
'
ence that neither Dibble or Chari- t' d Le 1 d'
th ·1 ft
disappear in a hUrry. In spite of it
cia11y to Chris Sabo really hun. ton should pass a bauer t"n•••u'onallOReTh1s
· yproves
an s that
au you
on Y
a era all, Dibble could ...
mtch "•or me.
.·
""'
that
need
Sabo
'Was
when
he was ly. Their control is not that good.
· lead~r
· to manage 24 or 2S
Shortly I am going to write an
injured.
As playing
a result his
performance
strong
was below his standatd and at
Lou's crazy theory of l;mking stars. It helps·to have the respect of article about the 15 ball players the·.
times he really hun •he Reds in a the pitcher at the end o ·seven the players as a baseball manager.
Reds should retain after the upcom.' ·
few games. Here wal" a man who innings also destroys the starler.' s
was there a turning point in the ing dralt. I plan to consult with.
gave 110 percent, but operaled at mental condition, especially when . season as far as the Reds were con-· Louise "Gilly" Gilmore, our Reds
75 peltellL The wriler cannot find the relief pitcher could not bold the cerned? My answer is yes. It was in expert in Meigs County, and a :.
fault witll Sabo because he wanled lead. This wrller's theQry is that the the first game of a three game sports expert in Gallia County to ;.
to play ball and was winning starter should pitch until be is series. held ~n Atlmita on August 4. ascertain their selectiens.
~
player. What a contrast between showi~g signs of weakness. At Cmcmnall was .ahe~d 5-2 ~nd
Rupe, I have had several indi- '
him and Eric Davis, the former le!l!lt g1ve the starter a ~hance to Atlanta was battmg 10 tbe mnth viduals approach me to refrain ·;.
Reds outftelder.
.
, fin~sh a game before gomg to
. the inniog. ,This was a game that Tim from writing for this paper due to:;:;
itupe,l believe the biggest fault rehef corps .. How do Y~ suppose Belcher had retired 23 batters in a . the fact that my articles replace~··
. I find with Lou Piniella w.8s that he
_Belcher, R1ho or Sw.mdell felt ro\Y. Charlton was the relief pitch· arti.cles written by George R. Pla· ; ~
did not know how to handle pitch- when they sa'!' a wei! p1tched game er. By virtue of walks and error, genz. .As you know· ~eorge R. Pia-.;-:
ers. My complaint against him was . go ouJ ~ wmdow sunply because Atlanta tied the game, 5-5 in the ger;tz 1s an ou~tandmg synd1ca1Cd :;,:
that on quiiC a few occasions, he · seven innmgs were enough fll' the ninth. In t~e lOth, Allanta scored • ym1er and he d!scusses mu~h m?TC :~·
would F. the starting pitcher after starter? .
. .
..
two and WO!I the game.
. ·
mtellectual subJects than th1s :wnter.: ·
Seven mnings of w&lt;irlc. ~had a
'l_'he Reds recently have played
This game ha~ a _deva~tating does . Therefore m orde~ to keep ::'
theory that a starting pitcher shoUld thell' best baseball. They were 10 effect on the Cmcmnau Reds . everyone ltappy the wnler feels 11;.
thrqw approximately 100 pitches ·In ~es out when· the~ went on a morale. The TV camera showed would be ~est for the readers to.-...
per game. If he toot out a starter he wmnmg. streak. Atlanta s lea~ fell ~elcher about ready to bite the ~- have my arucles appear at the most; 1
would substitute either Scott from 10 112. to 4 1/2. Do y~u die olf one of the bats. He was fw:t· evCI'Y, two weeks and perhaps only : ••
Bankhead, Scott Ruskin, or. others know, Rupe, ~'!hat caused th1s ous and 1 understand why. The one 11me per month.
·:·
fa one inning. Then tie·would send change? The wnlef ~eels that !hJS Reds went out of Atlanta 4 112
Carry o~.
·
• . ••
in his .blazers, Rob Dibble or Norrit came.IIIKI'!t when Pimella went mto games behind Atlanta. The final , · Editor s aote • Long·hme ;
Charlton. l!Qth Dibble and Chari- .the dre.ssm~ room a~d Started a two games in the Atlan!ll series Attoraey Fred W. Crow lathe.;
ton are strike out pitchers. Both ~ght With. D1bble. 'lb1s confronta- .. were. lost in part caused by the contributor of a w:eekly column::
were guilt~ giving liases on uon had JIS effect ?R the W·~ole . defeat in the fu:st game.
.
· ror The Sun~ay T1mes-Seutlne1 .•
balls. On at · .three or four occ_a- ~· On that occas1on Lou .made
There were two other games that ~~ders wlshmg to applaud, erlt· ;:
sionsJhis past year, t!Jis did not D1b~le and the rest of the team were lost when l!le Reds should ICIU or comment oa any.subject~.
wotk. Asare5ulttheRedslostsev- realize that he Wl!S boss and that have won. Do you remember the (except religion or ~ollt1cs) are ,.
era! games which should luive been the 1eam ~ould play betlerorelse. game with the Mets when Dibble . encou~aged to ~r1te to Mr. ;.
in the winning column.
• .
By usmg muscle, Lou con- waited twci and Bonilla hit a home . Crow, m care ofth1s newsp11per. ,

.OccasiOOally, the fllC!Iia rises to · U.S, News &amp;: World-Report , I .ing academic· departments,. com: . era of hard times, an affordable:;
an ~.ofpublic lletVICC :hat can would suggest you go to your near- fortable living facilities and distin· .education - including available:•
· help families save hundteds, mayb;e est library and photo-copy the · gitished IC8Ching scholars.
· · scholarShips - takes precedence&lt;
· even thousanda, of doJ1ars for,..thcrr
An indication of how prospec- over the ll,est eilucati,on. And more::
children'scollegeeducatlon.
tive siudents feel &amp;bout vanous uni-· and more students arc discovdtllifi·
Recent issues of Money Guide
· versities was provided last year that many public universities offer··· /
~ ~.S. News .t World Report are Jlllies dealjng with their respectiv~ when a list was pubJis!led o! the 15 a high·v~uc education.
·
,;
That s why I would stro"gly:r
felicllous examples of suc:JI public . articles: "Best CoUege Buxs" and top. co!leses and um~ers1tie~ to
serylce. Both have pubhshed an "America's Best CollCFS. •
. wh1ch bla,ck and wh1te semors urge ~ollcge- bound studenas and:.
impreulvc compendium of inforThe lists are not identical, wanled ~elf ~~T scores senL &lt;?ttl~ their .parents (o examine closely ; ~ ·
matlon that answen three critical although there is some overlaDPina, til~ .un1vers1ti~ m~ both hsts. Money Guide's list of "The 10 •·
qllesti0111: ,
.·
·
· and neither ·list is the ultldlate Fl"!lda State Umvenuy_. Syr_acuse Best College Buys,"
· . · ·Thos~ 10 best buys are ·RiCe -:·
'(1) What ate the best colleges aUthority on higher eciueatinn, The · Umvenlty ~the Un1ve~IIY of ··
and universities? ·
· ··
most superior ·a11thoritics are: (a) North Car:olina at Olapel Hill. · . · University, New College, Universi- ;•
' ; (2) Wblt ate the bCst affordable the family pocketboot imd (b) the
Although .Harvard: Is rated the · ty of Washin~l!m, Hanover Col· ~. ·
. ·
pr:Ospectivc atudeiit's "feeling" for best unlvenlly by U.S. News ~ lege •. Califo11)11lnstitu1C of Tech- .;
colleses and Ulliversities?
W~rld ~eport, tire l~y Leasue .s nology, Tretnon Srate College.~~·, ·
. (3) What. are the chances of a· the~ and ita campus.
student getting IDto tile college or
"
g" can be almost m~tt- p~mua mtor pares d1d not make , Georg1a In~titut~ of Te_chn~logy ••1!
Ulliversif&gt;: oflils or her finl II' sec.- cal, but for a potential student, 1118 . e1ther llsL ,That could be bees~ 1 Rutgers Umvers1ty, Umversuy of&gt;_.
ond ~.boice?. ,
.
as tailgtble as the variables cif ~overriding fiiCIOI' for v-e~ta _ •N~ Can?lina at Chapel Hill BluL
; If you didn t buy .or read the . national reputation, SAf scor~s. co~l~ge-bou~ stud'e~IS IS ~ New Mel\ICO Institute of Mining.,
recent copies of Money .GuicJe..or athletic championships, ouiStand- ab1btv. In this.Rcpubbcan-n
and Tedlnology.

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Layaway Now For Christmas

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legislature
success
with
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Gov. Voinovich. tastes

By ROBERT E. MILLER ·
Volnovich let the. sysum w&lt;irlc
Alleit:llted Press Writer
everyone benefiled, he said.
·:
COLTJMBUS - Stale lawmakAsked if he thinkS Voinovicl\ •
·ers .O.f bo~ parties surprisingly put
niay have learned a lesson, Riffe :
.
pohUcs as1de and worked together aled.
said, "Time will ICIJ. I got a littJe: :
The adminisiration "Wdc a very
last week to pass legislation thai
active
role in it," Rirf~ . said, note from him (on his retUrn front ;
could give Ohio's economy a badly
the Dade mission). He said be wu ,
althou~h it was he arid Aronoff
needed boos!.
looking
forward to seeing me." : :
It was an u.nusual display of who d1d most of the bargaining
Commenting
as the two-day ses~ •
bipartisansbip in a re-election cam- while Voinovich was out of the sion ended, Riffe,said ''it remindeO :
paign,season, although inspire&lt;f in country for three weelcs on a south· me of the days when 1im Rhode~ '
part by hard economic times and cast Asia trade mission.
Riffe has said that the governor, (an old friend and R'f.'lblican ~ :
what both parties perceived as
•:
in the past, tried to dictate to the maker) was governor. '
vo1er expectabons. ·
·
Aronoff,
who
has
had
differ~
•
But Gov. George Vol'novich, Legislature - "it was either his
Coutinued oa A;.{)
:;
who has been feuding with the way or no way." 'l'his time,
l.e8_1slarure, went out of his way to
p,ra1~e the lawmakers for acting
qmctly and responsibly,'" and
that was unusual. ·
The administration knd some·
Republican legislators wroiC the
legislation, which gencrally grants
LAZER
tax breaks to industries that creaiC
jobs, but it was expanded to
include Democratic proposals~
,
. ''It was not a Republican or
ALERT
De!l'ocratic package. It was an ·

_

CI'.DCinnati
.
. Re.Os, 19
. 92.

•

Political analysis

~~While

Cdge may ilotc:ount as nliJCh in. debate-d.om~ fmale.
' • The Bush debate offensive bas to beJianc!iwor:k of lamesA. Baker Ilt,
the president's low piOfile ehief of staff and campaign overseer, whose
:lleild has been in the Republican bargaining on debates,ever since they
.•tererevivedin 1976.
.
.
:• ItW.S Bater who cau!loned in successive GOP campaigns that debates
•.W'fectively froze the process in place, risky for a candidaiC holding his
:pwn'or pinin~, but useful in a stall a a slide.
•,. Still• .or
• a
•
ger, de'"··""""'can JliUVI'de stature• purung
a new and
•Jess familiar ftgure on the same s1age and the same footing as the presi:Jent of the United StaleS.
·
:• That will work in Clintoo's favor.
.; In any&lt;event, Ointoo WIISII'i dodging, and couldn't have afforded it if.
:~~e'd wanted to,' not even for a day. His campaign had been dispatching
:h:hicken Gcorge'' ·demonstrators io Bush rallies since the president
. . on Pres'd
,·~ a Jll oposal.b'i the unofficial
1 Comm1SS1on
t ential DebaICs
.
1 a series of three that would bave stariCd 10 days ago.
t• A Renoblican chicken showed up in a Clinton rally crowd at Drew
• u...........
• .:• tless1y. "'
"I'mton was so
· ·r.ty~ m
•V ntversl
n, NJ ., Wednesda y, pom
for debate that when he heard Bush was appeann· g Sunday night on
: lAry King Live call-in program, he said he wanted to go, too.
• "Let's get it on, Sunday njght, Lllf1'Y King, let's begin,'" he said,
'
01e his people checked the idea. When they did, it turned out the pro· .
~
is taped.
. ·
·
• ·
.• But the Clinlon side ~!early was startled by the terms Bush proposed
rluesday u he campaigned in Clar:ksvtlle, Tenn. -four deba1es; two with
•llinlle moderator, the commission format Clinton favored, two with pan:Jls olrepoden to question the candidaiCS.
:t_;;!~m not
. hWlJ up on the formal," Clintoo said, alihough he'd argllf.(l
.,..;.. that Bush wlllliCd a panel of reporters involved because that way he
;.owd_~~~." the process
.
· and avoid iSSIJ!lS that would _be raised with' a

Sunday

'•"•

.

my neighbors. It is highly offensive tana with just one House
~ ~ ~ be IICCUscd of being un·
This is proof that the rhetoric
Chnsuan by pe&lt;ll?le who do not dispensed in Houston last August
~INC.
practice the fli'SI pnnciple, which is about "religious wars~· was.not an
tolerance."
idle threaL With a $13 million war
Ande~son
W.illiams'
role
in
the
NEA's
chest,
and more than a million vat' 111 Caurt SL,I'IM!IOI'Ofo Oblo
· fundmg of controversial art has ers on a computer !ape with phone
{614) !191-2156
been conveniently twisted. His numbers, the Coalillon's political
" sin... was to engineer a bi-partisan designs clearly extend beyond
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
l'llblllber
compromise in 1990 that renewed Montana. .' ·
.. .
the NEA' s statute. S! n. Orrin
Last January, at a Coalition con~
HOBART WD.SON JR.
PAT WHITEHEAD
Hatch, R-Utah, lll81l8ged Williams' ference in Montana titled "God's
Aaololut Publkhei'CaollroUor
Kw:idlte Edlloir
Williams, D-MonL M'ai'lenee's let- rea~thorization bill in the SenaiC, Building an. Army, " Coalition
ter added fuel to fire.
wh1ch passed overwhelmingly in director !Wph Reed laid out a bat- .
. In the Coalition's "Conference the H~use by a 342-58 vote. Con· tie plan to fight "pro-abortion· mid
·
A. MEMBER ·of The Anociated Press, and the American
Newspaper Publilbm ......,..Ilion.
·
and Striuegy Briefing" for this serva11ve Reps. Newt Gingrich; R- 'liberal forces" across the country. .
election, the Montana race is Ga. , and Bilt Dannemeyer R· Reed-outlined the five underpinLE'ITERS OP OPINION an .welcome. They abould be !e11 Ilion
described as "the mother of all Calif., even signed on toWilliams~ . nings in his speech to the Confer·
; 300 WOldt. All lettell an JUbject to editing and mull be sigoed wilb
:
1992 House baales." But there are 1peasure.
..
. .
~nee. Reed drew heavily' from
• Damt, addleu and lelepboae number. No unoigned letlen wUI be
grounds
for
.concluding
thill
this
Nevertheless,
the
Coalition
ancient
Chinese philoSopher Sun
: publilhed. Letto11 ahould be in good taote, addre11ing i11ueo, not
wiU
be·thc
mother
of
all
dirty
cam·
flooded
Williams'.
district
with
·
Tzu·~
"TheAnofWar."
.
.
pononaliliea.
paigns because the Coalition has negative radio ads that were filled
Reed said that the movement
cherry-picked the NEA. issue , with distortions and misinforma· stumbled in the 1980s because it
.
.
unmercifully smearing Williams as lion in the fmal week of the ·1990 · telegraphed its political targets· ·
"Porno Pat" and challenging his campaign. In one ad, the Coalition ' 'when it came to knocking off
personal religious values. ·
w2111ed that Williams "wants to somebody like Pat Willjams,"
"I happen to be . Roman raise oilr taxes to pay for pomogra- according to a transcript of his
Catholi~," Williams told our asso- phy." Williams survived those speech.
ciaiC Ed Henry. "I am a practicing atlacks, but the Coalition is flexing
"What I'm suggesting to you is
Christian, which 11\e&amp;nS I'm also . its muscle even harder this time to be,effective, you must be secre- ·
.
. ByWA.LTERR.MlARS .
,
·
tolerant of the views and beliefs of beca~ redistricting has left Mon· live, you must r,aint your face and
AP Specilll Correspoadent
.
- travel at night, ' Reed said. "Sun
. MILWAUKEE -It's a lesson from the Republican presidential cam·
Tzu says that'·s what you have to
jlaign primer: When the debales start, everything else stops, or might as
do to be effective at war and that's
well. Bill Ointon presumably hasn't read iL
essentially what we're.involved in,
; While he claims victory now that campaign debales with President
we're involved in a war. It's not a
· Jlush are all but guaranlecd, the negotiations are largely on While House
war fought with bullets, it's a war
term&amp;
•
fought with ballots."
!- The Democratic nominee has been doing fine the old fashioned way,
Reed allowed that he felt "a lit~unting voles on ·the road and on ICievision, talking about jobs and the
tle weird,at a Christian Coalition ·
ecollOmic slump, and building a SICady lead in the public opinion polls.
· meeting, telling people to go out
; Clintoo is at it in Milwaukee and Madison today, while the debate bar·
and get the philosophies of an
taining resumes in Washington.
·
• ancient ... Chinese philosopher who
• He wanled, and necded,-campaign debates against the president, but
didn 'I know the Lord." But Reed
hot necessarily tile unprecedented, intensive month of debaiCS· under disextolled Sun Tzu as "the greatest
pussioli now.
·
warrior that .ever lived" and called
, There's Cetl!linly no ~ Bush will benefit when the rv.debates
the principles he lived under, 2,400
)Ire held; the debaters, perhaps iocluding Ross Perot, will determine that.
years before the birth. of Christ,
• The only sure bet is that a month dominated by debaiCS will be differ''eSsentially biblical principles.' ' ·
~nt. and change is to Bush's advimtage. The status quo wasn't working for
"At every moment disguise .
your position and your truth from
Clinton said the Sunday debate rn;tes Bush proposed were
the enemy because the minuiC you,.
)mpnctical tw':ause of TV sports conflicts - he merltioned the World
stick your head up, you can be ·
Series - his side was said 10 be willlng to hold four debates, negotiating
shot," ·Reed explained to the audion wllcn.
ence.
• They would have to be ali:&gt;ut weekly, with little more than a month to
Williams knows what it's like to ·
That, lime for the candidates to prepare for each encounter, and one,
be caught in the crossfire of the
pedlaps twO vice presidential debaiCS, won'tleave much time, energy or ·
Coalition's reli~ious war. "To the
ltiiCntiOII for other political ventures.
Christian Coalioon, this isn't a race ·
. , In addition, an in1ense debaiC scliedule would hold down campaign
between the person called. Mar!e·
~osts, since debate time is free and the nominees .will have tO trim travel
nee and the person ,. called ·
achedules to ready themselves. A side effect will be to concentrate
·
.
·
•
Williams,'' Williams toltl us.
iesoUrces oa TV advertising, which also could ald Bush, the candida~e • "That's OK, George, nevermlnd .... When these bills come up again next "This is more a referendum: on·
their issues."
~e~ \:~·had 'the ~varuaae in pany fund-raising, ~~ the .. year! President Clinton will sign 'em .... "
.
··
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Gov. Voinovich... -.co_nt_inu_ed_r_ro_m_A-.:..s_j)_

Continued from A-1
smaller classrooms which are usu·
ally converted from other rooms.
At Portland Elementary, slu. dents in the Chapter I reading program are cramped in what used to
. be a restroom, and at Racine Elementary. boys and girls in that program are taught in a comer of the
basement maintenance. area crowded, dark and windowless.

fined44 on_Wednesday, while fOUf
.
. othe':SfOf!Cltec!bonds,
... , Fil_led were. Kenneth Hickman,
Hockingport. specd,.$30 and costs;
, _'I;ony B. Hawk, P~meroy, speed,
$20 ~d costs; Jarruson S. Proffitt, .
.Portland1 left Qf center, $10 and
~.costs; MIChael H. Andrew, Crawfore!, W.Va, _speed, $25 and ~SIS;
, ~ail~llsb P. RaJ, .Cleveland ~·gshts,
. •· ure 10 stop at a stop s1gn, 10
and costs; Monte H. Swindell,
.~ Shade, s~t . belt viol ilion, costs
,only; J8fi!ISO~ Proffitt, Portland,
seat belt v1o~uon. costs only; Marl!;
Russell, Rac:me, seat belt violation,
-costs . only; Samuel Harlow,
Cheshire, ~t belt violation, cosiS
only: Jam1e Barrett, Langsville,
•• seat belt violation; costs only;
John_ny R. Sellers, Racine, failure
.. tq d1splay registration, $10 and
·COSts.
,
.
. ~ Cristy Ann Ri~, LonB Bowlm,
"~~!}assured clear distance.. $30 fme,
-4uspended, costs only; Donald W. .

Pomeroy,ICBI belt v1o18ti9n, _costs
only;RonaldR..~.Middlc·
port, _aeat belt VIO~, c:ost&amp; only;
Men1fl:!' E.. Blev1ns.; Middlepo~,
~~mesuc v1olence, SIX montlls .m
Jad, suspended~ 30 days;c:~~ts,
five )'CI!1'S probation and restraining
o~de_r ls~ued; Ada"! C .. Ward,
CU1!:mDIU, seat belt .vKllation, $20
P::::. cos~~~ ~:v1_n j,J!,::ward,
eroy,.
VIO •
• costs
~mly; Kellie N~. Racine, .speed·
mg. $20 and costs. • ·
· M~k ~yes, Middlepo~. s~t
belt !)Oial~on, costs only; AJ!nl
&lt;;undiff, Midill~ seat belt vilauon, costs D~?ly; Jane A. Aimstad.
·Pomeroy, fulll!C _to conuol, S_IO
and. costs; Knsune M. Hams,
Racme, ~· $20 and costs; W~ter. A. Elfis,Rutland, seat belt VID- .
latiOn, costs ~ly; Howard J. Slusher. Logan, failure to conttol, $20
and c'!sts; Jeffre~ N: Durst,
Reedsville, seat belt VIolation, costs

only; Jason A. Baer, Racine, seat
belt ,violalion, COSIS ~ly; Edna G.
DaVIS, Rutland, speedma, $24.00
costs;KevinHelltoo,PomeaUJ:.ICil
belt violalioo! costs ·c;mJy; 1~ W.
Ross. Coolvllle, fulure to y1eld,
$30 and coats; Fred B. Paxton, Gal·
lipolis, speeding, $25 ~d costs,
driving under suspens1on, tltee
days in jail, suspended with vlllid
operator's license wilbin 60 _days,
$65 and costs: James N. W1lson,
S~ad~, speeding, $19 and costs,
driving under~· $75 and
costs, three days m jai~ suspended
with yalid operator~&amp; license iii 90
days.
··
·
.· ·.
Cynthia Smith, Reedsville, DUI,
3!1 days in jail, suspended 10 10
days, $4SO and ·costs, one year
operator's license, lWO years pobalion, failure to control, $30 and
costs; James Vining, Syracuse, no
operator's license, three days in
jail suspended with valid operatof.'S license in 30 days, S?S alid
costs; Marion Roy Ropmson,

· 199J dues schedule announced Two hospitalized, five others
,by Gallia Chamber of Commerce injured in S.R. 16,0 accident
By JIM FREEMAN

some membetsllip ra~ because of
the recent reorganization between
the chamber and the Community
·Improvement Corporation, Fowler
said. Merging the ·two ente~prises
~esulted in a 40 percent reduction
-ID expenses.

f1.1ture imd in the future of GaUia
County."
·
The chambu has been active in
a number of county projects,
Fowler said. He gave several exam-,
pies of projects in which the c~- •.
her and Community Improvement
Committee are acuvely involved:
the Bidwell-Porter Sewer, the proposed induslrial park: near Bidwell,
the strategic planning process and
the five-county coalition that
pushed for scrubbers on the Gavin
Plant.
· Perhaj_ls the most important ~­
sons to Join the chamber is that
chambers help maintain pride in
community, Fowler said. The com- .
munity needs something like this
andpeople ,working to supportiL

Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Some Gallia
County businesses may fmd memhership in the Gallia COunty Chamber of Commerce a little less
expensive in 1993. Larger busi·
Students at the high school with nesses, on the other hand, may find
Fowler said businesses joining
learning disabilities face similar the cost has increased.
According
to
Jack
Fowler,
exec.
the
chamber receive several bene- conditions. Their classes are conutive
director
of
the
chamber
and
fits
·including
the use of chamber
: ductid in a convened library starCommunity
Improvement
Commitfacilities,
assistance
in obtaining
age area, where tables and desks
·
financinjl
and
consu)tation
for
tee,
the
1993
dues
schedule
is
have to be manipulated simply to
·
based
on
membership
of
actual
~
busmess.
allow entering and exiting the
businesses and companies, instead . • !lie lloal of the chamber is to
room.
of on membership of individuals promote Gallia c'ouilty witb the
.
Double classes fill all class- within the businesses and compa- end result being more opportunity
for progress," Fowler said. "By
. rooms at Portland and Letart nies.
For inslance, Fowler pointed out joining the chamber, businesses are
: schools, where special education
. students are mainSireallled - that is, that some smaller companies and making an investment in their
placed in the regular classroom. businesses would purchase memTherefore, teachers there are forced berships for more than one employContinued from.A-1
. to prepare and execute lesson plans ee. With the new dues system,
businesses
pay
only
one
member· for as many'as three groups of stu- .
ship.
.
. where children play, thC water from explained.
: dents.
The new dues structure is based which baby formula is made were
Torres also said frequent nulriTeacher work areas, infmnaries, on the type and size of businesses - listed by the nurse as some of the tious snacks are recommended for·
office space and even gymnasium the more employees an establish- main sources.
young children because less of le&amp;!i
and physical education space are ment has, the more the membership
She said that parents can initiate mgested is absorbed into the blood
either inadequate or non-exij;tent in costs.
activities at home to decrease a stream from a full stomach•.
Categories
within
the
due.
s
the
elementary
buildings.
.
;
child's
exposure to lead. '
To limit lead dust hazards in the
.
·structure are (listed with cost per
"Young childml have a nilural home, Torres recommended wet
· : Although clean, Ord con lends number of employees):
thumb-sucking pattern and put dusting and mopping, washing up
1
that the buildings are all in hope- · . Category I • automotive, service objects into the1r mouths. This loose paint chips from window
lessly poor repair.
stations, auto repair, restaurants, exposes them 10 ICII!L 11!e wie of a sills, ·and disposing of all paint
retailers, wholesalers, personal ser- paciflCMhat is cleaned frequently chips and cleaning rags safely.
"The people who work here vice business, grocery .stores, agri- may decreaSe the need to suck on
"Safe house cleaning, safe home
.work hard to make things as atttac- culture. One to five • $150: six to fingers, toys or other objects that improvements, frequent hand
ti ve as they can and to get as much . 25 • $190; 26 to 50 • $230; 51+ • may be covered with lead dust washing, gOod nqlrition, and yearly
utility from these old buildings as $360.
·
from the environment," Torres blood tests can prevent or greatly
they can," he said. "Many of the
Category II .· construction, said.
·
reduce the risk of childhood lea!!
: expenses involved are paid by the apartments, mobile home parks,
But the thing she slreSSed most poisoning'," Torres concluded.
. te~c~ers out-of-pocket. B'!.t the . transportation, schools, umversi.. is frequent and thorough hand Additional information may be
· buildings need 10 be.replaeed.
ties. One to five·. $170; six to 25 • washing before eating lind after obtained by calling the Meigs
The proposed building program $240: 26 to SO • $270; SI+ • $360.
petting the dog or caL Leaded dust County Health Department, 992.
. .
Category III - accountants, doc- can he transferred· from the hands 6626.
mvolves an appr~ved appltcau_on tors, lawyers, engineers, manufac- and ingested when eating, she
for state C~J!!Strucnon ~unds, which · turers, publishers, hotels and
would provtde $3.4. million toward motels, broadcasting, insurance,
Continued from A-2
: the new construcuon. Howev~r. real estate, fmancial services. One
. state law reqmres that the dis~ct to five • $190; six to 25. $270: 26 ·
---------'-------: gene
_ ,rate
seven
percent ent
of the dis$31 o·, ' + • $450.
Ravenswood , w.va., struc
· 1c f rom scene· of a one-car accident on
total
tax
ard 10
' trlCt s .
assessm 10 w
Other membership categories be!Jind a vehicle driven by Connie . Township Road 248 in Raccoon
I ~ pm~t. That amounts to a IOC:U include: senior individuals ($25), C. Jarrell, 62, RL 2 BidwelL
.
Township in Gallia County Friday
, · match" of $3,906,741. That s associate memberships ($50) and . Both vehicles were southbound afternoon.
.
: where the proposed 23-year bond non-profit and sales representatives on S.R. 160 wheli Jarrell stopped in
According to the report. Brenda
, 1ssue comes m.
.
doing business in Gallia County traffic and was struck from behind
K. Cochran, 23, Fifth Avenue, Gal·
; . The pro~ new school build- ($100).
.
by Cooper.
lipolis, was westbound on T.R. 248
: mg would provide classroom S!lace
Membership dues are negotiable
No injuries were reported and
when she came 10 the dead end at
f!"' K-S,_as well as support serviCes for some establishments such as no citatiOns were issued. Damage , the end of the road and .suuck a .
hke.a hbrary and medm center. banks, utilities, local governments, to Cooper's vehicle was listed as
guard rail.
,. •
mus1c and art rooms, cafetena and hospitals, etc. ·
.
1'110dmlte and JarreD's vehicle susNo injuries were ·reported and
computer area.
. ·
.
For comparison, 1m membu- rained 110 dam
no citations were issued. Damage
A proposed, .un~sclosed Site has ships cost busiriess $160 and indiage.
to the vehicle was listed as moderbeen loc~ _wttlun the _village for · viduals $200.
Patrol probe!~ Olle-tlll' wreck
ate and it was towed from the
The chamber can afford to lower
The patrol was aiao called to the scene.
. the new building, Ord S8ld.

.

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ences with Voinovich, also was the near future.··
Jenny Camper. :V oinovich 's
asked if the governor may have ,
learned something. He smiled but press spokeswoman, said the gov- .
ducked the question.
. · emor has always tried·.to "extend_
. "The administration was all the olive branch 10 Vern and Stan·' '
and knows of no changes · in
sweelllesS tltrotJshout this process.
· and we !IJ'C v«y gniteful," Aronoff appro~ch. But she conceded the
said But he said, "I think you.are relationship has been strained and
going 10 see som¢ more summits added~ "I think it is improving."
(bipar1illan leadership meetings) in
I •

Ord...

:~Od~o;~~~4,~1~99~2~========================~P~o~me~~~Y~·~••:dd~l~~~rt~G~a~ll~lpo~lla~,~O~H~P~o~ln~t~P~Ie~a:u~n~t,~WV~~============~Su~n~da~y~~~m~e:•~Se~n~t~lne~f~P~~~~Ag7
POME~OY . _Meigs c,ou~ty Gainer, Zanesville, Cail!ft to ~Co~t Judge Patrick H. ~ Bnen trol, $20 and costs; ~Y!ft.R. Klem,

''
POMEROY -Pomeroy Post- l have one :son, Terry; a dauah~r
master Tom Rculer and full-time and son-m-law, Mr .. and Mrs . .
city carrier Dale Davis relired Fri- Danny (Rhonda) Dav1s; and two ,
day.
'
. .
granctchildren.
. ..
·
Reuter was employed with the " hm Sundquist. who IS ..-ese'll~Y
postal service for 35 years and postmaster at Beverly, will serve as
eight months. Jle wor!Ced in officer-in-charge at the Pomer9.y
Pomeroy aU of dlat time, starting as offic_e until a ne~ pos~m~te( .IS
a temporary clerk and foot route appmnf.e!L SundqUISt resides m r,.!tcarrier. In 1969, he became a tleHoeldng.
.
. -" ·.th
1 •., WI
supelVisor and assistalll postmaster.
Davis has ~n emptor
Reuter served as postmaster for the posta) servwo for ~ Y~· !:fe
. resides in Middlepon wtth his'!"*
appioximltely five years.
He resides on Rock Springs Karen. They have one son, Ch{is.
Road with his wife, Janice. They

OFJilCER-IN..ctiARGE • Jim Slllllkialst, ript, wiD serve u
olflcer-ln-cllarp at tile Pomeroy. Poat 01Jke anlll a new postmaste~ is appointed. Tom Reater, len; retired from that position on
Friday lifter 35 years and eight months of service.

.

-=o- 'Brien fines 44 in Meigs_Cou~ty Court . · Ohio·UAW workers
prot es't I ac. t 0 ry. saIe

Davis retire
.

from~postal

RETIRING ·Pomeroy P01tmaster Tom Reuter, left, and Dale
·navis, right, full-time city carrier for Pomeroy, retired Friday
from their work at the Pomeroy Po&amp;t omce. Reuter bad worked
with the postal service for more than 35 years and Davis more
than 28 years.

.

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October 4, 1992

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~enter,
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Lead...

p atr0 [•••

so .

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·BIDWELL • Two people were
Saturday morning followmg an accident on State Route
160 in Springfield Township, Five
others were also injured.
·
Bonnie S. Clemons, 34, and
Zachary S. Clemons, 35, both of
Morpn Sisters Road, Patriot, were
admitted 10 .Holi.el: Medical Center .
for o)lservation. A hospital
spokesperson said Saturday afternoon the two were in stable condition and being tteated for multiple
contuSioos.
The five injured, who were
~ted and released for multiple
contuSions, were Carlos Gillenwa- ·
ter, 17, Curtis L. Gillenwater, 14;
and Patricia S. Clemons, 10, all of
Morgan Sisters Road, Patriot;
Oscar R. Dempsey, 49, Gallia
Road. Palriot and Richard A. Johnson, 36, Rowlensville Road, Vin~italized

•

sundaY.

~vvember

s

&amp;

~vriday. ~vvember Et

To - h hi• own..•
. ho11111lu •peclal p~•-

According 10 the report, Mrs.
Clemoos was stOpped on S.R. 160.

Coal...

Payment In full due by October 15. 1992 ·

.. ..

•

. l'eDpi111 .Cbake c.b oke triM! oppw•lll•• .. ...cbGke &amp;.=rfal
Peoples.Oiolce 1$ a d!vlsiOn of
• ......... rw ,.__
the~ BlnkdFolnt l'lelslnt. Member ro!C. ·Membels must
maintain a S10,000 mlnnum baiance In Peeples Bai.k !lepaslt

50_..,.,•.

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-s•.crrtt,....;,b4
wUh~MiofQtt(l •n-.v.
.
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&lt;exducllns c:hecldns accounts).
' 1)

l

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line

at spas

startlna as low as $1 ,850.
Ottcount prieel on winter ccwert,
wimer kltl, '"''-'reeze, Matera

IN STOCK

.

IIIL-r.t. 1:30-l:ee; ......, 1:»2:00

SHIP u;p,s, DAIL ·

LEATHER
NuBuck
Insulated
. workboot.
Reg. 49.99

MEN•s

~
,....:£- ~Tati"onal
l'l
••• _

Give II the belt ·
protection po•aJble...

Michelle French, Jordan Sbank, and Whitney
l'boelle. Spe~l to yolinpters ,on tire sately is
a part of tbe department's obkervanee or Fire
Prevention Week. ·

................

Continued from A-1
sa'id. ''It could really alter the
whole dynamic of the industry.''
An' industry executive, who
spoke . only on ' conditio~ of
anonymity, said that the olljec!i·/e
of the new association is "to foJrge
an agreement that recognizes the
value o{ labor and management
having common objectives."
"They want to get out of the
paradigms that have restricted the
agreement in the past. where e-tety
change is a grudgmg concession you can have that, but I want this ·
- as thou~h it ·were a divorce
agreement,' the executive said.
·

Continued rrom A-1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _---'-_
_:;::::::::::::.::;::::..:.:..:..

; e,.;iRd residents that human care- audible warning of a fire and pro;;Jessness is often the cause of fires. , vide extra time 10 escape a danger..,.
Smoke Detectors
ous situation.
~· "Test Your Detector -It:s Sound
As for the location of smoke
. ~dvice" - is ' the theme of Fire Pre- detectors in a home, Shank said
~\.ention Week.
·
they· should be' placed on every
S.tatistics pfovided by Jeff . level, including basements, and an
~ hank, Pomeroy's assistant fire
additional one ·should be placed
~hief, show that smoke detectors outside each sleeping area.
'"8re the single most important safety
Maiilteriance of smoke alarms is
::fiCtor, dlat they cut by 50 percent an im~t factor. Shank said that
:lhe risk of dying in a home fire. battenes should be replaced at least
"'Wh~n a fiJe strikes, the snioke once a year or whenever the smoke
r~~~~~
into a detector chirps, signaling low batand that
escape plans are vital to
escaping from a burning buildinJI,

Auto Club

:t

Call Angle

·'"' Delals
446-G699

. .

~

.

WINTER.
I
ZE
.
YOUR BOAT NOW.
OUR PRICE IS HOT.·
'

he sai.d ·PractiCing how ·you wooid
escape if a fire slrikes is crucial not
only for· children but adults . .It.
means that residents can get out
faster and with less panic.
·
He said that if you have practiced crawling below smoke level,
feeling ,your way along the walls
and counting doors to your exit, in
a real fire you will know exactly
what to do and be better' equipped
to exit safely.
,
Another key thing to remember,
Shank said, is that if yOUf clothing
catches on fire, stop, .drop to the
ground, and roll .to extinguish the

IOIID

STERN
DRIVE ·

$34.95

$69.95

RUBBER:
•

BOOTS

28.88
a' GENUINE

SUEDE
Insulated
workboot.
Reg. 39.99
•
VALUES UP TO
. . .99
.
.

flames.

I

•

.

OUT

AND

,.

11.14 .
a·

P.V.C
NuBuck
Insulated
workboot.
Reg: 24.99

/

. It's a srnaU price to
And throughout the
. month of October, it's the special price Pleasant
Valley Hospital is offering the women of Qurcommunityforascreeningbreast mammogram. Why?
Because we know that when breastcanceris found
at the earliest possible 'stages, your chance for
survivalisnearlylOOpel'cent/ And mammography
is an important part of the three-step early detection program all women should follow . .

•

28.88
a· GENUINE

NATIONAL

OIL SUEDE
· Insulated
workboot. ·
Reg. 39.99

BREAST CANCER
If you_are age 35 or over=: the age at which the
AWARENESS MoNTH
American Cancer Society .. recommends you have ·
.
a screening mammogram· you cantakeadvantageof9ur$49 special with a physician's order. We'll
honor orders from any physician licensed to practice in West Virginia or Ohio. And you should also
know that most insurance carriers, induding M~icare,are 1;\0W covering screening mammography.

Ask your doctor now to order a screening mammogram for you. Then !;Chedule an appoii)tment at
Pleasant Valley l!lospital by calling our Radiology Department at (304) ~75-4340, ext. 283. And if you
··
think you can't afford a mammogram, think again. Now you can't afford not to have oile.
•

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See our

ALL

"

Shop and Garoen Center. We'D also sPend aJew hours
Oulstmas shopping
at the St. Clalrsvllle Mall.
..

. ,.,.

When you layaway your pool

ior next summer at 1992 l,ow
.
Discount Prices-$100 Hoids Your Purchue.

a· GENUINE

FIRE ESCAPE PLAN - Practicing how you
:;'-would eacape btfOil tire strikes ean save lives,
~ ; Jeff Shank; Pomeroy Fire Department's assis'\l 'taat tire eblef, told tllese elementary students,
:-:.left to ri11,ht, Wesley Thoene, Adam Shank,

··

Pdcel $~45 Double, $135 Tdple, $~30 Q,•acl,' MCI $~75 .
5lnale. An 'ackltlonal $10 fee will be Chalged to nonmembers. For Jtiselvatlons or lnfoonatlon, Plea~ conlad:~ .
MaiY FO'Mer, Peopl~ _Olqlce (Qon:llnator, at_675-1121.

FREE MERCHANDISE

WORK

~ lnduded are a welcome reception, pre-tour holday .
l:NIIet. crvemight accornmbdatlons and ~tat Wilson
Lodge; and a tour d the Mansion Museum, OWtmas .

T

;~

iNSULATED·

As Oirlstmas approaches, Wheeling Is ablaze with Ughtsparkling In the trees, Shining over the streets and glowing
In Ught displays. Some ot the most beauUful displays are
to~ b.lndat:Oglebay Pcllk's 'Winter Festival otUghts';
Join us In November for a guided totir d this unique

'

l@~~t.f!~~

1.48

PaY·

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Michael Stewart, Shade, seat
helt ~iolation, costs only; Terry L.
Smith, Racine, failure .to comply
with orders of 11 police officer, 10
days in jail, suspended to three.
$350 nne and costs, forfeiture of
$500 to"the Law Enforcement Trust
Fund, two years probation; Scott
. Whobrey, Middleport, stop sign,
$10 and costs; seat belt vjolaJion,
costs oly; Sarah L. Wiles, Racine,
speeding, $21 fme, $11 suspended,
costs.
•
Forfeinng bonds were: Adam
Want. Cincinnati, speed, $85; Timothy Triplett, Portland, speed, $85;
]ames Albright, Jr., Ga!lipolis,
speed, $85; David Phillips, speed, .
$85.
.

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DETROIT (AP)- More th1111 has plants in Sandusky, Bristol,
200 United Auto Workers union Conn., and Cadiz, Spain.
members and retirees from Ohio . The~ plant, with .l 760
picketed Friday outside General hourly workers, produces seveilll
Motors Corp ..' s head~uarters to types of bciarlngs, including wheel·
protest the automaker s plans to ·. spindle bearings used in all GM
seU their plant.
front-wheel-drive vehicles. It also
GM announced Aug. 28 that it produces bearings for Toyota and
was putting its Delco Chassis divi- Chrysler corp.
.
siot~ up for 5l!k. said Clyde Sims,
The Ptolcst·was organized after .
shop chainnari .of UAW Local913 OM officials refused to reconsider
in Sandusky, Ohio.
their decision to sell Delco Chassis,
Delco. Chassis, part of OM's Sims said.
•
Delco MQraine NOH subsidiary,

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·Outstmas Wonderland.

costs.

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HUif!ITING SEASON

facing north and waitirig for tralfic
to clear to make a left-hand turn
onto a private drive.
A nOrthbound vehicle driven by
Johnson struck Oemoo's vehicle.in
the rear, knocking it. off the left.
side of th!l road.
Clell)ons and her five passengers. were ejected from the.vehicle
bnto lhe roadway.
•
Johnson was cited for failure to
·maintain an assured clear dislance
and nQI wearing a seat belL Both
vehil;les sustained heavy and di.sabling damage and were towed
from the scene.
· .

ton.

•

. Guysville, no pro~r registration,
$10 ind .CO~ts, driVinJ under sus- '
pension,threedaysinJai~suspeoded, S7S and costs; Floyd J. Ross,
Pomeroy, improper backing, $20
and costs; Kimberly D. Turner,
Coolville, failure to control, $30 '
and costs; Jeff A. Rcitlllirt,
Pomeroy, no driver.&gt;s license, 30
days in Jail, suspended to 15 !lays,
$100 and costs, two years proba· lion, alcohol assessment, Daniel L.
Henry, Dexter, speeding, $20 and

3 877. ~
.J

1993BAJA 1_80 ISLANDE~fsl·
Mercury 4.3 LX .
Alphe.Drlve, 180 I:IP. .

OJ*1 bow,
·

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s11 :500·
rw 110 Anglef wll &amp;0 ltp MII'CUIY ;
I
.
Ill BOYI Wltll ftiYI

'According 1o the Americ;an Cancer.Society

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I~A

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
~
. '
Th~ family of professionals , · · ·
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2520 Valley Drlve,, Polnt .Pie~, WV 25550 (304) 875~

(HISHIII OH~ ·

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LOOI AI THIS DEAU

614-167·7102

J

U you· don't have a .personii physician, yet wish to. t.tke advantage of lhli special offu, call
PhyaicianMatch. our physician referral health line, at 675-lPVH (675-17841, or toll-free 1-800-333. lP~ ~1-«10-333-178&amp;1, for the IWIIe of a doctor who can order a mainmogr._ for you. ,
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303 Upper.R'iver Road

·. · Gallipolis, ()hio •· ··
17.

VISA AND

II ·
.(

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• . f'o~y Middleport G.,llpolls, ~o'lnt Pleeunt, wv

A8 Sunday nmn Sen~nel

• P11ge

October 4,

.

: Gallia County'.s most famous squirrel hunter recalled
By JAMES SANDS

..

Spedal CornspoildeDI

GAlLIPOLIS :__The September
· ' 4 start of Ohio's sqUirrel bllnting
season reminds US dill die Qliy ·SCI·
.tiers of Gallia County kept four .tlif·
ferent kinds of
·
dogs:
The coon dog
was used for hunt·
ing raccoons, wild
hogsandpossumt,
the hound was
.: used for foxes, a
' small dog was
used for squirrels and a sheep dog or
similar anim8l helPed herd livestock.
. Many of the early squirrel hunters
· had to be careful with some varietieS
,of small dogs because they tenaed to
be "suck-egg" dogs, that is Iiley stole
eggs out of .tile hen house. One
.Jackson County fanner of lhe 1850s
. claimed that the way to cure a "suck·
egg" dog was to boil an egg. While
the egg was still hot. be would put the
egg in lhe dog's mduth and press the
·jaws lOge~.
The hot egg would blister the
mouth. Supposedly the dog was to
atsaeiate eggs with pain.
'

. j'.

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:

•• ; POMEROY • The Third Annual
' ' Big Bend Stemwheel Festival will
·-be held next weekend (Ocl 9·10, II) in Pomeroy and it promiaes to
: · : provide a variety of activities for
people ot all ages.
..
The Big Bend Stemwbeel Festi·
val Committee has been hard at
wor.k 'planning the cve11t; .which .
holds' !he polelltialto become the
largest such festival in this part of .
,, · the state.
..
'
According to Larry Banks, pres·
~ ident of the festival commmce
' there are presenlly 32 txiats regis' tered to come to lhe festival. Vol·
: unteer belp will·be needed during
' stemwheel weekend and Banks
• encourages anyOne who is intaest·
: ed in assisting 10 contact him at his
~ OfflCC, 992-S009,' ,
' .
:
P.A. Dea•y crulles ·
:
Cruises on the P.A. ' De!my will
· be featured this year. One of the ·
; cruises will be off~ for Meigs ·
:· County Senior Citizens on Friday
• at2 p.m. with those tickets avail.
: able through the senior citizens
· center. At 7 p.m. on Friday 8IIOihc2'
• cruise will' be offered for riders to
: . see the lights of Pomeroy at night
: · and on Salllrday seats will be avail·
•· able m the P.A. Denny during lhe
&gt;stemwheel races with boarding at I
; p.m. There is limited seating onlhe
, P.A. Denny and Banks encourages
. those interested to reserve their ·
.; tickets in advance from Clark's
' Jewelry, Valley Lumber, Banks
'' Construction or any committee
member. The cost of the tickets is
$10 for adults and $8 for children
under 12. ·
,
Run-Walk
l A 5K Run-Walk, under the
1 dirt:C~on of Mike Kennedy, will
begm 1n Mason, W.Va.; at 10 a.~.
,on Satur~y at the levee and wlll
; ,conc!u~ m ~croy II lhe levee . .
1Part1C1pants will be returned to
:~Mason. W.Va., by a SICm~heeler.
·: Thecoursefortherace18mostly
androllows.lhe paved streets of
,.Mason, W.V~Lc, onto to Rou~ 33,
•across the Pomeroy-Mason bridge,
.:and along the beautiful Ohio River
:to Pomeroy.
.
.
• Plaques and JU1ZCS wllt be pre·
$ented to the .top five mate and
:femille runne,rs. l'laque~ w!ll be
-«warded 10 lhe first place rmisbers
:1111d m~s wil! go to the second
p~ fimshers m each of the f!Jl·
Jowmg male and female ·age
;aroups: 14 and under; 15-19;. 20·
:f9; 30-!9i 4049; and 50 and over,

COMPLETE .STOCK

SUITs··

:

~imt.s- :ientia~l
Section
B.
' •·
October

_, Big Bend Sternwheel Festival kicks off OCt. 9

Fs// .Fe1.lir~l•l Ssring1

•3 hp Gas Water Pump
•Ya hp Sump Pump
e&lt;:arpet Cleaners
•S hpliUer
eGos Weed Eaters
•Sawzall Saw ·

Said Friday. .
. 'TI)e Grand Rapids-based chain
. said some applesauce marked as
unsWeetened might be sweetened.
"This product may be unsuit·
· 'able for mdividuals on sugar·
,restricted diets," lhe com~y taid.
• The company said ·1t had no .
'reports of illness .because of the
•
enar.
.
Customers may return any 50ounce jar of Meijer's natural applesauce to any store for a full refund.

.

Anne a widow at age 32. 1t was fol· ~--~~-------------------. .- - - - - - - - lowingherhusband'sdeaththatAnne
turned to becoming an avid hunter
(supplying fresh game tosettlenients).
She also recruited soldiers for the
American Revolution. In 178S,Anne
married-frontier soout John Bailey.
From 1785 to 1802, when Bailey
died, the pair served in a number of
!'
.
. \ . . ...
•
capacities along the frontier, inclild·
ing as scouts at Fort Clendenin, Va.
· (now West Virginia).
·· After John:'sdeath, Anne took up
.
..
the jJrofetsion of traveling merchant .
She would take pack holljCS to Staun·
ton loaded with furs. SM would then
exchange the furs for such things as ·
coffee, drugs, gun powder, pocket
lrnivesandcooldngequijimeitL These
shesoldatCharleston,PointPieasant

LOOK WBI,. WE BID
FOR BElT•••.

," GRAND.RAPIDS. Mich. (AP)
· - Meijer Inc. is voluntarily recall·
'ing all of its 5(k)unee jars of Mei·
jer Natural App~uce because of
a labeling error. the retail chain

Along the River

,

ItisestimatedlhatpC3CUlly theie . Churth on SR 218. The thun:h Was and Gallipolis.
. .
areinOhiol.5millionSq~lstaken builtin 190SasaPisciplesofChrist
It wuat the insistenceofbenon
.
William that Ann moved to Gallia
· by hunters each year. About60 per" Christian ChQJ:Ch. .
.: .
cent of thOse talten are fox squirrels
Accbnlingilpiecewriuenin 1979 County in 1~17. Hethome•WISapen
(orangefurondlebelly)andabout40 byFrankHill, AnneBaileywasusu- ,of feaee rUls co~ with straw.
percent are gray squirrels. •
ally "clacJ in buckskin pants, with After awhile t11C1e, the aain&amp; lady
In 1953 .the ratiO of fox 10 gray pettima(beavybropns!locs.aman's moved iDwith her 8011 •.11 wu lhere
squirrels wo 7 10 3. Grays have coat and hat, a belt arolind.her waist she died in I~ atlheage of83. She
thrived in .some preserves; c~ upoowhichhungahuntingknifeina w8s\JuriednearwherellaileyCh&amp;Fel
-HoUowinJacksonCounty.beingQIIC sheaih and with long rifle on her · isJiowloc•Mitwasaboutacentury
such place.
.
shoulder."
1a1er thai her remains were removed
· In lhe early annals of pruo,some
Anne was born in Liverpool, and placed in Tu-Endi-Wei Part in
historians record a migra!ion of gray . Englan'd, and came 10 this country Point Ple&amp;o!anl
squirrels numbering in the millions. about 1761.. In 1765 she m~ed
Jama Sands Is as~l ~orreThese grays Wf\lCked havoc with the frontiersman Riclwd Trotter with the· spondentoftheSundajTimes-Sen· · . . BUILT IN 1908 • Bailey Cllapel was built in 1908 oa land
where the famous ~ulrrel hunter and scout Anne Bailey once
corn crop ami me counties en~our- pairresidingnear Stauntoh, Virginia. dnel. His currenl address Is: 65
Uved. 1be church - named In hoaor of An11e by the organlzlag
aged farmers to pay their property
Mr. TrotterwaslcilledattheBatlle WUiow Drive, Springboro Ohio
·
paltor, JIDies Ma$sle.
.
. · .
taxes in squirrel pelts. The going rate .of Point .Pleasant in 1774 leaving 450U
· ·

wall three
cents
per skin.
hunter
in the
1850s
killedOne
160 Ohio
gray
squillels in One day.
It was 10 protect the squirrel population in the 1880s that Ohio insti,luted its fmt hunting laws. The season was to last eight months. By lhe
1930stheseasonhadbeenreducedto
two weas. Tbe bag limit in 1902 was
set at tO per day and reduced to four
by 1928 where it remains today.
In contrast to his gray cousin, the
fox squirrel may seldom 1111vel more
than tOO yards from his home except·
during mating seasQII.
One of the great early squirrel
hunters of Oallia CountY was Anne
Herinis Trotter Bailey. Anne lived
POMEROY • Units of the' for a few years in a log cabin that
Meigs Cmmty Emergency Metlical . stood neai the present Bailey Chapel
Services responded to three calls
for assistance on Friday af~moon
and early Saturday morning.
On 'Friday at 3:27 p.m. the
Pomeroy Fire Department reSpond·
ed to an auto fire on Main Street.
The vehicle was owned by Jim
Snodgrass.
•
At 4 : ~4 p.m. the Rutlan~ Fire
Department responded to.a motor
vehicle accidq~t on, Route 124 in
which Marsha Atkins was trans·
'ported to Holzer Medical Center.
. On Saturday at 4: 14 a.m. the
Rutlnad unit was called to Meigs
Mine No. 31 for Richard Horphat
,who was taken to O'Bleness
Memorial Hospilal.

Applesauce r«alled

1882 ·

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IUSTORIC BACKDROP • ServiDI 11 a majest~ 1111d historic
backdrop, the VDlll&amp;e of Pomeroy Is home to the Big Bend Slerowbeel Feltival, Thll plc:ture, lake• lit lasl year's festival, sliows lhe
All registered walkers will be eligi·
bleforapizedrawing.
A pre-registration fee of$8 must
accompany Cl!Ch run application
and.$6 for each walk parti~ipant.
Pre-registration forms should be
received by Ocl 3. On lhe day of
lhe race the fee will be $10 for runners and $8 for walkers. T-shirts
are guaranteed for the first 100
entrants. Packet pick-up and mce
day registration is fiom 9-9·45 a.m .
The awards ceremony' for th~
Run-Walk will take place at 11:15
a.m. at the levee in Pomeroy
CbiU Cook-off ·
A chili coolcoff will be held Sat·
urday under the direction of Jay
and Sherry Warner.
. Plaques will, be given to busi:"
ness wmners arid individual prizes
~udc a Colcnlan Gas Stove, finl
place; a 16-quart stainless steel

'*'

historic skyline of ttie orlglaal rinr tOWII. Thll year's festlvai will
hosl 31 sterowbeelers and wlll proylde acllvltles' for people of aU
ages. (PbOic_&gt; provided by Cheryl Thomas)
·

chili pot, secOnd place; and a 56quart ice cooler, third place. There
is a $10 entry fee.
Rules for the cookoff state:
No ingredient may be precooked
. or treated in any way prior· fu th!l
preparation period which will begin ·
approximately one hour prior to the
,;:oolcoff. Tbe only exceptions are
canned or bottled tomatoeS, tomato
sauce, peppers, peppe~ sauce, beverages, brother and grinding and/or
mixing of spices. Meat may be pre·
cut or grolind but nbt treated io any
way. All other ingredients must be
chopped or prepared during the
preparation period.
Tl\e cooking -period will be a
minimum of three hours and a
maximum of four hours. C00koff
time is 11 a.m.
Teams may have a·maximum or
four members.

All team members involved in
preparation or·haridling of chili,
must show proof of a current negative TB test.
Each team must cook a mini·
mum of two ·quarts of chili, one of
which will be judged. More would
be appreciated for sale of samples·
to lleneflt a beiiCr competition next
year.
Team members are responsible
for supplying all coolcing utensils,
etc. You will be provided with an
area to do your coolcing. Electricity
will also be Provided.
Contestants are permitted to set
up their equipment, decorations
and other facilities any time aftel 8
a.m.
All ingredients (except perish·
able products), must be displayed.
Excess ingredients may be displayed 10 preserve set:retrecipes.

All contestants who have special
requirements or who plan to arrive
by special vehicle (i.e. decorated
cars or trucks, hot air balloons or
parachutes) are asked to notify the
sponsors at least three days in
advance so that adequate crowd
control procedures may be used.
Further information may .be
obtained by calling Jay and Sherry ·
Warner at 992·2528.

Schedule of Events
· Events of Thursday
feature
Dee and Dallas from 6-10 p.m. and
the Chamber of Commerce Cruise
at ~I!I'D ·
·
li!llday's schedule will include a
performance by the Meigs High
School Marching Band at 1 p.m.
'I'he senior citizens cruise on the
P.A. Denny will begin at 2 p.m .
ronowed by the cruise for,the pub-

will

lie at 1 p.m. "Ultimatum," a local
band consisting of Jason Bla~ k.
Sean Walton, Trevor Petrel, Chad
~and Josh Bartels, will per·
form from 4·5 p.m. and the Dave
BarrOws and lhe Wheels Band wiU
provide entertainment from 8-11
p.m.
. .
. Saturl!ay's events will beg in
with a flag raising ceremony at
~: 15 a;m. foUowed by a frremen's
parade from Pomeroy to Mason,
W.Va.
A baseball card show will be
featured in the office of Kenneth R.
Utt, C.P.A., on Main Street in
Pomeroy from 10 a.m. tO 4 p.m. .
The run/walk wiJI be held I 0
a.m. with a whistle blowing oonlest
at 11 a.m. followed by the walk/run
awards ceremony. The Ronald
McDonald show will 'run from
11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and chit-.
dren can. meet one-on-cine with
Ronald at 3 p.m;
•. ·
Denver Rice will entertain with
his ever-popular music on his toilet
seat guitar at noon and boarding for
the P.A. Denny race cruise will
begin at I p.m.
·
The sternwheet races will be
featured from 2-5 p.m. follow~d
immediately by the awards ceremony. The Captain's Dinner will
begin at 5:30 p.m. at the Eagles
Club in Pomeroy.
·
The .Ohio Valley Two-Steppers,
under the direction of Gerald Pow·
ell, will perform at 6:30 p.m.' followed by the Shady River Sh~
at 7 p.m . The musical entertainment of the Crossover Band from
8-11 p.m. will conclude Saturday's
events..
' The Herbal Harvesters Society
will host an herb fest, "Herbal Har·
vest and Country Fair.~ in lhe larg·
er mini-park in Pomeroy from 1.0
a.m. 10 3 p.m. where Bank One will
again offer beans and CO(nbread,
and an· antique show by Russ and
Hope Moore of Riverine Antiques
will also be featured. A flower and
quilt show is also being planned 8t
the Meigs .Count)' Pqblic LibrarY~
To insure no tuUm the action there
will be an old-fashioned band
organ playing throughout Saturday
afternoon at lhe levee in POnleroy
and Trinity Church will be hosting
a luncheon as well as iln arts and
crafts show for the festival.
·
Musical entertainment ani!
activities will also be featured at
the lev(ie area in Mason, W.Va., oit
Saturday beginning 11 2 p.m.. .

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The Answers You Need ...
'

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AS CLOSE AS vo·uR PHONE!,

·.
UUit;lj AVAILABLE • the Big fend
. Sterawlleel Festival Co10mlttee. has made
arraagemeatl to llave lbe P.A. Deny escursiOii
bo!ll at lhe Slunwbeel Festival In Pomeroy on
Friday and Saturday. Oa Friday, the stera·
wheeler will otrer 111 ev,e~-' ride lo see lhe IOWD
at nlghl for $10 r~ 1111d $1 ror children

.

uoder 1%. Oa
rides will be available
duriDJIIhe races.
may be purchased at •
Clark's Jewelry, VaHey Lamber, Baaks Con·
slructlon for from any committee member. Furlher lnformalioa may be oblalned by calling
Cheryl Thomas al 991-6763.
'

LEVEE SCENE • Tbls was the sene along
tbe levee In Pomeroy durlnglbe 1!191 Big Bend
Slernwbeel Fesllval. More lhlia twice as maay

•
boats are scheduled lo attend Ibis year's fesllval :

lle:d weekead (Oct. 940·11). (PhOio provided by :
Cberyl Tbom11)
·

Holz~r,llealth~ Hotline
.

'

'

'

·.. 1-800-~462~~5,255
•I .

.

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TWS COULD BE YOURS • George McClin·
·. tnd coutruded ~~~ model cit the steroWbeeler
"D""'Ihy" lo be Ulltd bJ the Bl1 Bend Sle.l,'ll·
wheel Festival Commlllee.as a tuod raiser. You

PARADE OF STERNWHEELERS • Pie·
; lured II I ..... ~ by tile crowd of peOple
.. ';, ~1!1 IJie 0~
Jl .fo~eroy ~urlo1 ~~
.

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.r

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t
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I

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never kaow • maybe yGII wlll"'be the lucky per· :
soa .ID wla the IJand-enfted model. (PhoiO pro- • •
v~ by Georn_McCIIntock)
·
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OH Point P,teeeent, WV

OCtober

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1882

u .
G~~IS ··The ,o OWIDI

Beat of the_ Bend... .

Frill~•. Oct. :z

&lt;

·
d
·
. Mez"gs· Coun·ry cale·n ar

.

10 a.m .• Wilking club .
ue acuv!laea .lad menus
Oct.~10 a.m.IO.IIOOII· Art claSs
9 at the OaUia Colmty Senior Cw· ·
Menus coosiat or:
by Bob Hoeflich
. zen'sCenter,220JIICksODPike.
Monday· Ptppa Steak whipped
~ Oct. 5 .
.
.
. • ' sliCe.!
club
•
potatoeS, IOSSed salad, bread, ced
0
W
• 1 a.m.- peaChes.
1~
a.m. 10 noon • Craft class
Tuesday • Turkey Tetrazzini,
So the week brou&amp;ht Rolli Perot boih of Middleport.
(making
I'll
rup)
spinachp..Zf!e
rings; CO"rnbread,
bet 10 us. You mi&amp;ht say he is a
They observed 88th binhdays
1 p.m. - OJot:us
tapioca
g.
day llle, but ,0U certainly Clll'tD)' on Oct 1,
·7·9p.m. TlltiiiJClass
Wednesday - Ham/raisin •
. tllll lie's a dollar sbon. We'Jt Ill
Tell)' resides at Stonewoqd
1'1lelda7,
Oct.' .
sauce,
·swee~ potatoes, green beans,
awue by this time that bo does Apartmentslbeae days. ~'allill .
10:30 a.m. ·STOP/eX~
cole slaw, diMCI' rolls. ice cream
ha¥11 the dollln. I blow about tho ' active and JOel 10 the Meigs Senior
10 a.m.10 3 p.m. - ~
and cake.
·
pmea tblt people play but isa 't bis Citizens. Center pretty replarly.
11 a.m. - Advisory council
Thursday - Chicken, Augratin
.rccatry IntO die race just a little She.waited tables there at lunch
12:30 a.m. -Video moriaee
. pota!Oes, brocc:Qii and cauliflower,
muclt?
time fQr some IS years. Earl, ~f
· Wed!lrrlll!y, Oct. 7
biscuirs, buit cup.
or c:oune not IWIIy did the past course, you remember from h1s
11 a.m. • Bilthday party
Friday • Fish sandwich and
.• week brins'Perot bact, but we niany years In th.e .field or eckM:a-'
naada,,Oct.a
cheese slice, panley {IOIItoeS,'csrwn wanied that it is ·bas deter- lion.
•
10:4S a.m. ·Bible study
rots, bun, pineapple cnsp.
mined dial milk is now a problem
10 a.m.10 3 p.m. · Quilting
Make reservations by calling
after ~ brnlded for yean as a · Ironic, isn't it'/
12:3010 3 p.m.~ HEAP
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
healdl food I Pcss lhal means a
Meigs County did all of the
12:45 p,m.- Short subjects
you wish 10 attend.
.
lot of 111 now have a "dtinklng" · good sluff·in ail attempt 10 get one
problem Ob well!
· ·
of the peaallnstillltions which ale
On the "home front". I guess 10 be conatructed-but the bcsa foot
we 'It illto drive by shootings now. forward didn't worlr PI again the
So far. it's been confined to a county was byp"Sed. .
f
scbo!ll building. I thought I could · A reader sent !l'ong a C2PY' ~
·camJ*e "w•ped" with the best of the~ September 1~sue o.f Ohto
· ~but solilebow I can't mtder- Farmer"-a magsvne which probstand the thinking in these ably few of y~ ~
.
.
inst•ICel Deslructive just for the •. In the ediltoo tS an arttcle ~mt·.
. sake of being destructive just log DP: the proresiS of ColiJ!IIbilns
doesn't fly in my book.
Coun~s who are ~linf.!:
COIIStruclloo of I pe!Uialbllly
Betty Gress Oblinger iS having They will. howe~. get it whether
some major health problems these they want !tor DOL
.·
days. Many of you will remember
According 10 the arttcle, fBrll!ers
Betty from many years at .Mar· are protesting the c_onstrucuon
guerlte's Shoe S10re. Beuy has bec•nse the~ wjll eat up the
been . active over the years 1n acreage on theu farms. They say
FRANKPARKERand TAMMYWELCH
numerous directions and bas been a they did not even :tnow until last
loi'jn~caring person. .She J~it!. 9 that Columbim_la County w~ . . , A1TEND CONVENTION- Recently the Guiding Qaud starr,
Ulldoullledly e111 handle your Show gomg 10 get die pnson wb1ch IS · a1oa1 wldl 400 odler mdlvldulls lllrougbout the state, were given
•
ofsapportriptnow. Sbe.isbome reportedly going to engulf some
the opplll'tlmltJ to update tlelr stills aad lmowltdJie at the Profesfrom the bolpiiBI and is UllderJolng 1800 acres even though some
sioul-'-datm
for retarded Convention (PAR) !D Columbus. A
~
COOLVILLE ··Larry Welch, School and a 1991 graduate of oulpltient treatments in· Gallipolis SOUiteS now have downgraded the
v..,teiJ ol topia ud s · - were available in regards to working
5, : coolville, announces the engage- WashingiOD Technical ClJI!ege. He and Columbus. She needs ypur am:age involved.
with handicapped cblldrea and adults. Al!long the attending stall',
~ ment and approaching marriage 'of is currently employed with Hal- JBR)w&amp; arid cards will reach her at
Protesrors are pictured with a
Ms. Barbara Spencer, (left) aDd Mrs. Barb•ra Bolden, (cent~r)!
: his daughter, Tammy Welch, to libur!OD Resource Management
South Fourth Ave., Middleport, billboard which reads:
hosted tle COIIferuce wid! other &amp;tate personnel and Mrs. Vtcki
Rev. George Homer will offici- 45760.
- Frank Parker, son of Albert and
"We won't trade com cObs for
Ault, (ript),- awwded • PAR ICholarsbip.
: Dorothy Parker, Chester.
. ate the open church wedding of
prison jobs".
Oct
25
at
2:30
p.m.
at
the
Grace
Miss Welch is a 1989 graduate
Belated birthday greetings to
• of Federal Hocking High SchooL Brelhren Chun:h of Coolville.
Terry
Don't forget ~ ¥eigs Coun'
. Byer and Earl Knight, also
Parker is a 1989. ~f E;!stem Htgh
ty Pioneer and Histoncal Soc1ety
will be holding its U 7th annuar
-' meeting today at the museum.
• FoUowing a 1 p.m. dinner, the
business sessiOn and
will
'
will end Dec. 21.
begmthe
· at 2. John Bpi. ey! m:;f~r
CHESHIRE • Edith Gardner, Frances Oiiver.·
New members welcomed 10 the
Edith Gardner Jed the Pledge ot of
museum corn ex m
··
.weight recorder, announced that
h
b
t
ta,
will
be
presenting
the
program
·
· ~ TOPS Miss Autumn winner was · Cheshire Chapter of TOPS were AI Ieg1ance
w .en mem ers me
and the business session will
Pat Mossman, .Mason, W.Va., Debbie VanMet11r, Mason, llena Sept 14. TOPS pledge was led by include the election of society
,,
when TOPS IIOH 133, Cheshire, Mossman, New Haven, W.Va. and Frances Oliver. Clifton, W.Va., and
; met Sept 2, at Cheshire United Carolyn Hart, Point Pleasant
Trout led the KOPS pledge,
trusleeS.
·
ha
be ,
On Sept 21, TOPS best loser of
Shirley Tucker was TOPS best
The society does ve anum r
• MethodiSt Church.
.
~
• ~ There was a three way ue for the week was Barbara Colmer. loser of the week. KOPS best loser of ialerestin~ publications available
:; KOPS Miss Autum11. Winn_ers Pomeroy, while KOPS best loser · was Emogene Johnson. A poem to t!"' p=ese days in case
·•~ wert Catherine Little, Cheshire: was Emogene Johnson, Point · titled "My. Search" was read by you m m _ _
· _
: ~ Emogene Johnson, Point Ple8sant,
TfOU!:
· ·
·
1 don't know if we should like
:' and Janet Thomas, Cheshire. Each Pleasant
Colmer led the Pledge of AileAii open house was held on Oct CluistoDhcr Coi\IIDbUS anymore or ·
: received a certificale of JtCOgnition giance. TOPS pledge was led by I. .
.
bes . noL He has some good press aild .
• '=:: and a TOPS charm.
·.
·
.Sisson, with the KOPS pledge
Shirley Tucker was T 0 PS. .t some bad press this year-the
:~.
TOP September best loser was being ·led by Johnson. A "erse loset; of the week on Sept. _7. She -- SOOth anniversary of his discov. : Shirley Tucker, Mason. Thomas titled "Many Thanks" was read by rece1ved a. g_tft from tlje g1f~ box
-and an incredible number of
; ~ was KOPS September best loser. Trout.
and a ceruficat~ of re~ogmuon. :;;venirs
out tbeJt. Ever have
-- ~ Winners received a certificate of
Thomas, leader, presented a Anyo~e ~ho gams we1ght, must a day when you feel we should
: -~ recognition and a cash prize. KOPS TOPS program and discussion on puta lift m ~ box. d .
. - give it back 10 the Indians? Do
; ' best losers of the week were how members feel about vatious
Anyone mtereste 10 1osmg ,.._ miling
Et)eryone Wel(:ome!
: Mamie Stephenson, Pomeroy and situations. "From time to time, we weight is invited 10 attend a TOPS """'~' s
·
&lt;" Helen Trout. Cheshire. Best losers are subject 10 both negative and
meeting. TheJt iS no Obligation. ,
;: of the week receive a gift from the positive social situations," said · . TOPS· members meet on Moo~ gift box and a certifiCate. of recog- Thomas. "How we handle each sitdays from 10:30-11:30 a.m .. with
•
"',... nition.
uation detetmines how SliCCCSSful . weigh-in from 9:30-10:30 a.m.; at
:.:
Special Lady contest ~inner we are with our weight losing pro. Cheshire United Methodist Church,
" was Edith Gardner, Cheshtre. It gram."
State ltoutes 7 and SS4.
.
~ was announced that there was a
Kathy McDaniel, Lotig Boaqm,
For more infonnalion on TOPS,
: .. no..g.m" week.
received .a Consecutive Loser contact Janet 1bomas at 367-0274
:= · A poem titled "Diet" was read Cbarni. l\ new cpntest, Miss or call IOU free 1-800-932~8677 or
'" by Virginia Voight, and Thomas Snowflalce, began on Sept. 21 and (800) YEA-'IpPS
· · 'read a verse titled -"Everybndy,
_ Somebody, . Anybody and
. '
::: Nobody". Pledge_ of Allegiance
EVERYDAY
•. - was led ·by Lorrame McCauley,
~ ; Mason. Pat Mossman led the 10PS
docton.
BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) sion by
LOW PRICES
it : pledge with the KOPS pledge - Michael Jackson modeled his
Jackson left Friday for Istanbul,
"; ' being led by Catherine Little. A new Romanian military uniform for Turkey, the nex~ SlOp on his _world
- ' verse titled "GI8dness" was read by state television - all bul the shiny lOur.
. 2 .... YCI ............ $259
::: Trout
.
black, ~ed cap with red feath4 .... YCI .....-~ $2H .
~
Job Well Done certificates were ers, which be earned.
VCR's
NEW YORK (AP) - · Daryl
;: presented to members who particiPresident Ion lliescu gave the ·Hannah is mating a "Splash"
13• IY ............- $229
: ·paled in the TOPS workshop on ceremonial uniform to Jackson as a again, this time with a rumored
1t-1Y~............-S269
~ • Sept. 2. Receiving certificates :-vn gift on Friday, a day af1u the pop ......,..,. with Jolw! F. Kennedy Jr.
CONSOLES
• Thomas, Gardner, )'rout. Llltle, singer thQlled 70,000 ,fans.~ a
A vicleotaDe shown Friday on
'IY
_
....
...
S3H
: Stephensbn: Barbara Coliner, Jan concert at Bucharest s Nauonal the tabloid T'V ·Jbow, "A Cunult ·
S4it
• Burns Sis90n, Voight, Emogene Stadium.
Affair" sbows the ·32-y~-old
-:!. Johnsqp, Kathy McDani~l. Betty
Jackson's Heat the World fOWl- actrellllld the 31-year-old lawyer
27•
"-·""'
$479
•. MurPII"Y, Pat Mossman, Lorraine dation has ~d for a playground gettins c:1ose on the stoop of al
u•1Yc..
.............
-~~~·- ~,.~- McCauley, Shirley Tucker 'and for orphans m Buchaltst and a mis- Manh8ltln brownstone.
27• 1Y tt.M ......... $649
'
- ••..•••••••• •
i5:
· 46•1¥ L1 • •--S1tt5

tc.:

completed
Final plans for serving the di nner • ~or the ~es ti val wt·u be
··
•
,•
on Oct.20 will be made.
Anyone interested m h:lpmg IS
• .
.
.urged IO.attend.
B d
· POMEROY· Meigs Local an
REEDSVDiE ·Eastern AthletBoosters will meet Monday at 7 ic Boosters meet Tuesday at 7·p.m.
p.m. in the high school band room. in the high .school cafeteria...
Parents lit urged 10 attend,
HOBSON . Rev. Karl Noggle,
TUPPERS PLAINS ·Orange Cliamber, Ariz., who works with
Township Trustees will meet Mon- the Navah,o Indians, will be at the
day at 7:30p.m. at the home of the · Hobson Church of Christ in Chrisclerk, Patty Calaway·.
tian Union on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Theron Durham invites the public.
TUESDAY
. Noggle wiU be taking back money
POMEROY • The Big Bend and .canned food for the Indians for
ANTIQUITY - Descendants of Sternwheel Association will · meet
the late H.A. Fred Hayman and Tuesday at 7:30 p~m. at the Carpen- Christinas
Garnet F, Polk Hayman, reunion, ter's Hall in Pomeroy. Final plans
RACINE . Southern Junior
, Sunday, at the home of C. E. Hayman, Sr., Antiquity, 10 a.m. Dinner
at noon, afternoon ballgame. All
Telatives and friends invited.·

.

SYRACUSE - Second annual
pancake brunch sponsored by
.Me'lgs Assix:iation for Retarded
Citizens, Sunday, 10 a.m. to 2 p,m.
at Carleton School in Syraeuse.
RACINE • Children at Risk,
The Battle for the Hearts and
Minds of Our Kids, will be present·
e8 Sund!iy at 7 p.m. at the Racine
First Baptist Church.
POMEROY • Meigs COunty
Pioneer 'and· Historical Society.
I 17th annual meeting, Sunday,
Meigs County Museum 10
Pomeroy. Dinner at 1 p.m. precedes the meetin~ . Afternoon· program, 2 p.m. w1th John Briler.
l!lanager of Campus Martius:Ohlo
River Museum Complex, Marietta.

Welch-Parker

SOUTH BETHEL - South
Bethel New Testament Church,,
homecoming, Sunday. Meal at
noon. Afternoon service ·with special singing. Rick Eberst, Colum·
· bus, evangelist. Public invitea.

--

J:grmn

CHESTER CHURCH OF
NAZARENE
WILL IE HAVING A SPECIAL.
lNG
SUNDAY EVENING,
OCT. 4TH AT 6 P.M.
Well know• singers In this area,·
- COIUD COOK &amp;

THE CALVARY ECHOES

are

. ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs junior and senior youth
kick-off with annual church
hayride and wiener roast. Sunday,
6 p.m. at the church.

•

From Charl,ston, W. Va. Wl1 be featured.

~

u.s.

S441

·• '

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ho•loz•i- $59_..,

Health Care IS A Problem

.We, at Veterans Memorial Hospital, know that health care is
~ problem these days;
.
The problem runs across the nation and attempts are being
•
made to develop P.lans which will provide affordable, excellent
-health care for every man, woman and child.
'
.. Did you know that in 1989, Ohio hospitals ptovided about
$487.7 million in care to peple who.could not or 4id not pay ·
,...
,.,. their bills? Did'you realize that more than 1.3 million Ohioans
=- about one in s_even - have no health insurance to help them
· through illness? Many more are ,under-insured. ·· ·
·
~
We look forward to the promised solutions to the nation's
health care problem' just as we look forward to continue setviog you· ~d your family.
~
,•

~
POMEROY • Be~inning and
• ·intermediate cloggmg classes,
• Monday, Pomeroy Village Hall·, 6
,• p.m. Call-992-3578 or 949~29I7
for information.
·

BIG SCREENS
PORTABLES

WIMI

. . . . . 511.1:»5

a... .........
7
8howrDOIIII

I

,.'

All

DeliverJ
Alw•J•·
Held To
Whea You

..
..

.

'.,.

SUND
ALL

BASSETT * FLEISTEEL * SPRING AIR *.CALDWELL .• STEWA~T
QUALITY * JIMSON "' THE. C~AIR COMPANY * IIVERSIDE COROLLA CLASSICS * RESTONIC * BEECH BROOK * CARLYLE
. IMPERIAL * FORTRESS * STANDARD * BERNARDS
. ARTIST
COLONY "' ENGLAND/CORSAIR AN~ MANY MORE.
•

QUALfTY
FPRNRURE
ON SALE

I

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UPIO

62o/o0ff
THE SECRET IS OUT
HEll IS ONI

RECLINERS
SUNDAY
ONLY

llnillll ••••· mirror, ch•t.
hlhoiOII:_ItaoJrdA:-

$

19811
SLEEP SOFA

Jado "'"' ,..un~ng ......

5 BIG HOURS

Queen Slza.lnner•prlng.

'SUIIDAY
,. GillY

IWSULL
..· TUI .·

4 ploco lUI.., Tracltlonll. O...er,
mirror, cholt, hot ~b oord, ~-

Teal.

SUNDAY

SUIIDAY GillY

*388

$

......

60" CHINA
Cherry fln,l lh, curio .. nd•, · mirror &amp; !

SUNDAY ONLY

1222

SECTIONAL
2 PIECE

lASSEn

\

FLEXSTEEL
SECTIONAL

1

.,...

Cloth recliner In 2 c:o~l)fS.

IIMSOII 4 PC.
IEROOM SUITE

COMP"TER lOLL
·TOPDESI

'

Rlve1'81de o1k flnl1h.

$L88''

TWIN SETS

SUNDAY
. _ONLY ...:.U.

STARllifG~Af-

fttto sn·

FIUnEEL
SLEEP SOFA
F~ll •Jze blue or ·11111we,
lnner•prlng mett,....

su~~: !ill'-~

·

•

$·118888

. sg:~:Y

-

~444~-~

'IWIIIIU:I

~--·

-- -

.,-·--

IUIDIYDILY

••••

PUll

-

.$29.95

'

All LAMPS
I
.

· Y, OFF

FlEXSHEL ROCKER
REQINER
~.
.
'

2C~~:DAY
ONLY
-'

$34444&lt;
.

:

AT LEAST ONE OF EACHJTEM LISTED.

'

Supporters
On Sale

.

1

EMPIRE IN

STARTING AI

AIIBQd&lt; .

I

BIG MANIS.
SUNDAY ONLY

MAUvE JUMBO '

$199'-''

back.

FLEimEL ROCKER
RECLINER

SPRING AIR

• RUTLAND • Rutla"d Fire
: Department Ladies Auxiliary will
: meet in special sesilion Monday at ·
: 1 p.m" at the Rutland File S1811011.

I.

IH

"d Av•.

. Pho11• 4A6·1 .4.05

G1lllf•·' '' ·

•

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i

•
I

CREDIT
SUBJECT
TO
APPROVAL

•

.

,,

'TIL

HERE'S THE
IEWS .

.:
REEDSVILLE - 9live Town: ship Trus~. ¥onday,s 7:30p.m.
,, at the Shade RIYer State Fores1ry· .
t building.

.

llOURS
SUNDAY I PM

•

1.aot-137·1217
'

OPEl 5 BIG

·, ·LET ART • Letart Township
: Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m., offi~e
•~ building.

lURE

742·2211

I

•

lsal1lk

RUTLAND F

Store Will cloH
Fr!day After11oon
and Doors Open _
Sun,day at P.M.

PAGEVILLE • Scipio 1'ownship Trustees, Mond8y, 6:30 p.m ..
: Pageville Town Hall. '

er...
,...,.
.... uCnll

•••

Open Citizen
Hours planned ,

:

everyday.

-.

. I

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CARPENTER • Columbfa
: Township Trusiees, Monday, 7:30.
: p.m., ftre station in Carpenter.

aox-:

~g

CUS
ER
PREC
0

.

Come and ... one of the largeat TV . showrooms In the arM with. over 50
unltl Of' dl8pltW. w. now etock llagnavox stereo Boom
Jutt l.n time
tor the holldllya. With our MW R.S.V.P. pricing structui'M, you II save even
more on ·our huge ....ctlon. •o don1 walt tor a ale. We have ~ow prices,

Sunday Times SenUnel Page B3

lle1d II.

HARRISONVILL.E ~ . Harrisonville Senior Citizens, bake and
: yard sale, Monday, 8:30 a.m. 10 4'
p.m., Monday. Everyone welcome.

VETERANS MEMORIAL .HOSPITAL

I

Available

•

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NO PAYMfNT 'TIL
APRIL93 '

SYlMCUSE • SQtton Township
Trustees, Monday, 7:30p.m., Syracuse Municipal ,Building.

r

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RACINE · Racine Village
: Council, Monday, 7 p.m., Star MiU
• Park.
·

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HOLIDAYS.

.

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RACINE . Descendants of
'ldward and Anna Dill will their
family reunion Sunday at 12:30
. ::, p.m. at Star Mill, Park in Racine.
: Bring a covered dish and table se_r·
vice.

~

BOOM BOXES

''

IN THE FOR THE

'

;

•

~

QUALm .
FURNITURE .

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•
MONDAY
: · CHES1ER - Chester PTO, open
• house a1 the ~ool, Monday, 6:30
• p.m. Meeting wiU foUow at 7 p.m.
•• Child care will be provided. All
: ·parents welcome.

, u• "_.............

.

I

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RUTLAND · Rutland Church of .
the Nazarene wUI be in revival
, through Sunday with· J?ave Ca~• field, evangelist. SerVIces are 7
p.m. nightly and 10:30 a.m. and
:' 6:30p.m. Sunday.

·w

· r---------------~--~----------------------~

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:
POMEROY · Meigs County
• Cooperative Parish, Gifts and Per, , sonality, Workshop, Sunday, 2-?:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Umted
Methodist Church. Rev. Lynette
, Anhur will conduct the workshop.
·· Public invited. Call Rev. Sharon
Hausman, 985-4312, for infonnation.

Names in the news

..

LOTTRIDGE • There wiD be a
. smorgasbord dinner Sunday _at··
from noon 10 1:30 p.m. at the LOt. tridge Community Center. Cost is
: $5 for adults and $2.50 for children
. under )2. Public invited.

'--..'

Pomeroy. wiD he conducting grive
services Tuesday at noon
for Patrlot Silas Fearing at the
Round Bouom Cemetery, Beverly,
POMEROY
•
American
Legion
and
foUowing
at Harmar
.Drew Webster Post No . 39 wiiJ. ' ''·-'etta,
for l'atriot
NoahCeme_tery,
Feanng . .
"""'
POMEROY • Lt. Governor
meet. Tuesday. Dinner at 7 p.m, _
Meeting at 8 p.m.
RACINE •'A grave marking for Michael DeWine will hold Open
David Reed, a soldier of the Amer- Citizen Hours in Meigs and Gl!llia
PORtLAND - Portland .E)e- ican Revolution at the Weldon .Counties on Thursday.
mentary PTO meets Tuesday at 7 ·Cemetery in Racine will be held
Ptizens and local. officials
p.m. Parents of fourth , fifth and Tuesday at 5 p.m. Public invited.
assiStance w1th,a state
needing
sixth graders who plan 10 play basagency are encouraged to take·this
ketbafl or to participate m cheerWEDNESDAY
leading are asked 10 attend.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- opportUnity 10 make their concerns
POMEROY • Post Matrons of ·port Li~erary Club will meet known lil representatives of the Lt. '
and
the
Evangeline-Chapter No. 172, OES, Wednesday at 1:30 p,m, at the Governor
Voioovich/DCWine
administration.
home of Mrs. Eileen Buck. Mrs.
· will meet Tuesday at 7=30 p.m. at Bernard Fultz will review "The
The representative will be at the
· the home of Kathryn Knight.
Mother Book" by Liz Smith. Roll GaUia County Courthouse at 10:30
BEVERLY • Ewings Chapter, call will he" an anecdote or memo- a:m:, and t.he Meigs County
Courthoue at 1 p.m.
sons Of the American_Re_.volution, . ry of my. mother." .

SYRACUSE • Chicken barbe·
cue, Sunday, 11 am •• Symcuse Filt
Station by Ladies Auxili,a~y .
Dessens available. · .
HEMLOCK GROVE • Hem ,
. Jock Grove Christian Church,
homecoming, . Sunday, 9:30a.m.,
poti11Ck dinner at 1,2:30 p.m;, after·
, noon program at 2 p.m. with t~e
Williams family singers. Pul&gt;hc
·invited.

......

EMPIRE FURNITURE'S

cuno-.R
NOTIFICATION
%MILLION DOLW
INVENTORY OFFERED

Financi

.

High School Boosters meet Tues.day at 7 p.m. ·at tlie junior high.
Bob Ord will speak on the tax levy.

Community Calendar Items
c1a b_.
1
appear twa 1811 .. ore an even
and the da7 ot th•t event. Items
must he received weD'In ach1111ce
. to assure publication In the cal·
endar.
SUNDAY
POMEROY • Revival, Pomeroy
Church of Christ, Sunday through
. Wednesday, 10:30 a.m. Sunday, 7
p.m. nightly. Dean Scott. evangelist. Andrew Miles, minister,
. invites the public. :

..l?...

; TOPS, KOPS name weekly winners .

...

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Pohit Pleasant, WV

October 4, 1992

Seniors.' schedule announced ·
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OH :Point Pleuent, wv

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Pomeroy lldcllepoit Go'llpolla, OH

.

Sunday Time• Sentinel

ca-emony.

MR. and MRS. JON

the JR!OID• serte&amp;j as ringbearer. He
carried a white satin heart shaJ.!Cd
pillow wilh lace and n'bbon 111111.
His tuxedo was identical to the
grooms.
. .
Kassie ' Thompson, niece of the
groom, llei'Ved as llower girl •.She
wore a white sheer dress trimmed
in minialure silk pcacb rosebuds
and a headllmd covered with peach.
lace and rosebuds. The wicker baSket of rose pelllls was decorated
with ribbons and 18ce. . · ·
For her daughler's wedding, the
bride's mother chose a pale ~h
slreet-lenglh dreww of sheer crepe. .
It featured a·lon!l fitted peplum Castened 10 the W81st by lhree match·
ing fabric rosebucl$, and long fitted
sleeves. Her accessories were
cream.
.
.·
·The groom's molher wore a deep
peach street-lenglh dress with long
iitted sleeves and a dropped
waistline. covered with a lace
bloused overlay. She carried a
small marching shoulder bag and pCach sbc)es.
Both mother$ wore corsages or
· peach carnations, ·baby's breath,
Iiiii! Iace with blue ribbOns. ·
A rec.eption _ foUowed the
ceremony in .the cliurch social hall.
The room was · decorsted wilh
pea~;h wedding beDs and light blue

The high altar was adorned with
twO large white wiclcer fireside
basket ftoral arrangeme11ts of peach
· silk mums intetspersed with blue
· and white sprays, white candles in
brass t;andlesticks, an open Bible
and cross. ·
'The QDity candelabra, two seven,
branched candelabras, and the
sanctuary windows were decorated
wilh garlands of peach and blue.
silk rosebuds wilh greenery and
white candles. The pews were
IIUIJted wilh large white satin
bows.
Prenuptial music y.-as presented
by Charles Burgey, pianist. and
Sherry King, organist. Dan
Armstron, frrend of lhe bride; sang
several . sdections including "An·
nie's Song," "Wind Beneath Ml
Wings," "We've Only Jusl Begun,
and "The Lord's Prayer," during
the ceremony.
. Escorted 10. lhe alw by' David streamen.
White, and .given in marriage by
The CO!JIIIe 's iable was covered
her ~ts. lhe bride wore a fonnal with a white skin, overlayed wilh a
gown of white satin with rosette- peach cloth and covered with a
trimmed puff sleeves, worn off 'the white lace tablecloth.
(KENDAl CAMPBELL
shoulders. Irridescent sequins and
The 'l'ulti-tiered wedding Cake
seed pearls trimmed the · fitted centered lhe tilble; A blue crystal
bodice and sleeve cuffS. The fuU water foQDtain was sunounded by
skin had a large satin bow in lhe four w!Jite collimns ftaqklid by four
ing bouquet of white baby roses back wilh an embroidered, seal· ~es at each. comer, and supportaccented with royal blue ribbon. loped hem. The,.i:alhedra1 train wils ing .!he lhree-tiers of cakes. All
The bouquet was highlighted witlt · embellished with elaborate cut-out were decorated with white frosting .
baby's breaih and pearl sprays.
dCsigns appliques and seed pearls. wilh peach and blue roses. Each .
'Fhe· maid of honor 'was Kelly
Sbe .;.,ore her mother's pearls and cake was fastened wilh a garland. of
Rizer, Racine. Bp desmaids were · pearl drop earrings, a gift from her pearls. A bride and groom porcehne
Carol Pape, Racine; and Angie grandrriolher.
figurine under a lace canopy topped
Queen, Gallipolis.
.
Her headpiece was a braided the cake. Johna Crump baked and
Flower girl was Brittany Morar• S&lt;lti\) wrealh highlighted with drop decorated the cake.
ity, Racine.
·
pearls and crystal sprays. The back
. ~ table also had two dove
B~fman was Mitch Whitaker,
was a sheer pout of wile rufftes figunnes, rwo blue tapers m silver
Paoli, Ind. Groomsmen were Rhett wilh a fingertip veil. Her wrist . bolders and two blue padded ~­
Keffer, Grove City, Pa., and Steve lenglh gloves were white satin.
kets wilh peach roses and wh1te
Bauman, Costa Mesa, Calif.
The bridal bouquet was a lace spray.
.
Ring bearer was Kyle Wolfe, trimmed cascade of peach rosebuds
Pictures ~ere taken by t;&gt;av1d
Racine.
will! long . white sprsys of seed Snowden. V1deos were 11_1ade by
G~ests were r,egistered and bird
pearls, love knOts, ribbons and lace. Becky Bateman·and Sue Wilson.
'
seed ro~s were.distributed by Kelli . Gayla Hammack, friend of the
Friends of lhe . bride, Beve~ly
Bailey and Juli Bailey, Pomeroy.
bride served as matron. of honor. McGraw and Debb1e Hussell regis. Pianists were Sbaron Haw ley, She ~hose a peach satin tea·lenglh tered guestS'and gave out programs.
Middleport; and Terri Campbell, gown wilh a sweetheart neckline, They were assisted by Joey HusMarion; sister of the groom. Vocal· basque waistline and lriple layered sell, nephew of dJe.groom.
ist was Joanne McFarland, New bows in the .back. She earned a
After a lrip to.Myrtle Beach, the
WilmingtOn, Pil:
· bouquet of peach rosebud)!, wilh couple
resides in Point Pleasant. .
The bride is employed by the
long
sprays
of
lace,
seed
J1Carls,
Out
of town guests attendmg
University of Rio Grande's Child ribbons and love knots.
were
Mr.
and Mrs. George Corbm,
Development Center as the lead
Tony
Thompson,
brolher
of
the
St.
Paris,
OH; Mr. and Mrs. Hersy
IOddler teacher.
The groom is the srore manager groom, served as best man. Ushers White, Hamlil!; PIJyllis and Danny
were Tim Oick, friend of llle bride, Hoffman, New lfaven; Rev. and
of Big Wheel, PQmeroy.
and Mark Thompson, brolher of the Mrs. Lee While, Teays Valley;
After a honeymoon crwea,
·semihn•athllee. groom.
. Tom, Beverly an_!j . S~non Me-..
· Bahamas on lhe T.S.S.
The gJPOm wore a white tu11:edo, Graw, Bidwell; Allee Cain, Rodney,
tlie
vlici&lt;lle!l&lt;&gt;n
peach tie and cummerbund. The OH; Diane Hughart and Ray Neal,,
best man and ushers wore black Charlesron; . ~andy . and Shawn
tuxedos light blue ties ·and cum· Thompson, Gallipolis; Pauline Pulmemunds. All- wore matching lins, Milton; Frances. Dudding,
boutonniers.
·
Leon; Florence Love, Letart and
. Anlhony Thomps(&gt;n. nephew of Patsy FilCh', G.Uipolis.

Rizer-Campbelf ·
MIDDLEPORT : Kenda Diane
Rizer and Jon William Campbell
were united in marriage Sept. 5
during a double ring ceremony at
the Middleport-First Baptist Church
wilh Rev. James A. Seddon offici· g.
abO
The bride was escorted by her
.• father Glenn Rizer, and given in
mamige by !tim. She wore a white
gown with a v-necldine and log-o· mutton sleeves which ended in a
point at the ~ingertips an~ _was
embellished wtlh pearl and mdescent sequin appli_ques. The
. bod!c.e
was appliqued wtlh pearls and rndescent sequins. At the hip was a
row of pearls accenting the v-cut:
At the back was a large bow pearl
and sequin applique. The fill! slcirt
exlendrA 10 a smalllenpll tram and
was ~ted by sequm and pearl
trinunCd lace. Her headpiece was a
- DWI pointed front peak hl~Jo wilh
beads and pearl SJifBYS extending
clown both sides and was attaChed
with a pouf .and waist-leDgth veil.
The wedding dress was made by
Cathy Cl.8rk. The veil, bouquets,
corsages and boutonnieres were
madc'by Kelly Rizer, ~in sister of
the bride.
The bride carried a side cascad·

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CJUCAGO (AP)- He's a man
with the mob and he expects to
come out shooting. .
.
.
Actor Bill Forsythe 1S playmg
AI Capone in a new version of
"The Untouchables," and has
arrived in Chicago to shoot eight
episodes·of the Paramount Pict~
TV series around the old cr~me
boss' hangouts.
·
"I went back 10 look at the uail,
10 see where it started and get a
good feel for what this is abou~ "
said Forsythe, whose film credits
include ' 'The Water Dance" and

''American Me.''
The new syndicated series,
scheduled to make its debut next
, year, covers Capone's life from·
when he left Brooklyn as a teen·
ager lhrough his years in Chicago,
when .his tommy gun~roting goons
held sway over the city.

TIJLSA, Okla. (AP) - Garth
Brooks must testify sometime this
monlh in a federal lawsuit alleging
Southwestern Bell let-calls tor
Brooks• concert ticlcets incapacililte
Tulsa's 911 system.

8 Lll. OR •on

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·

T H A I

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GALLIPOLIS,·OH.

1101. B4G

ZESTI
CRACKERS

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r••••••••••••· · ~··········- ~ ·-······

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IN OUR FROZEN FOOD DEPARTMENT

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SUNDAY LAST DAY

ILl. BAG

Bh1'f CROCKER .

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1:00 pm to 5:00 .pm

8,.0

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FBEICB FRIES

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TURKEY

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lfwe'ft 1101
It~ JIOIIIIda )'Oil
waat to loae. Oa oar Syalem Ill
Pf'IIIII'IIID, oar !Ow price coms. oae·
·oa-oae aapport, ~ereeala1 by •
Ceater ~. ucl • Hdby lowfit, IIJala ftber diet. ~. I poa WUI
to lind ~ bow
~· worll,
tty oar ..lrodactory Sylteto I, with
.
-~toedbi)IIIIII61Ttbilwry
111m price. • Doa't au- rtWII/I pour
clothea, oar JII'IIPIII Ue )all .your

aar

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HILLS HIRE
FIRMS

---People in the news----

A'flllgl Wllgllliolt on Syollnlllt ~lilt. per~

MlehHI I Friends H1lr C1r. Center
Now Offen Sc:ulptur.d Hills by Robin
Specl•l $5 Oft .Full Set of N•lla for 1111
. month of October. .
Other Hill Services Include: ,
· •Aigullr Milnleu'ru · ·
ofUII Tlpll. Overt.y •Hill Art
Gift Certlflc...l AYIIIIble

.'

LB.

MR. and MRS. LEE (AMY) THOMPSON

'Llss Kanner lost 40 pol!nda
on Phyalclana WEIGHT LOSS
Centers System Ill Progrim.~

• Tbe Medical Records Department at Veterans
Hospital observed National Health Information Man·
Week, rormerly National Medical Record Week from
27 through Oct. 3. The departm~nt, under the supervision of .
Stone, presented candy-r.Jied apothecary jars to rneml!ers of
tbe medic:alllafF, Employees were also presented the jars as well
as ranny packs. Employees Ia the photo are, front, I to r, Jane
· Hess, Joyce Redman; back, I to r, Carol Clelland, Joy~e Manual
and Karen Brouk. Brozak serves as medical records clerk for the
h!JIIIIItal's Skilled Nunlaa Facility.

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The.Perfect
Cift For A111.
Occtuioll
·. 446 0698

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No Rtfuadt
No Layaways
No Special,

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Corbin-Thompson .
· Amy Jo'Ann fubin, daugbter _o f
David and . 1udy White of Point
Pleasant and GeQrge and Geneva
Corbin of SL Paris, Ohio, and Lee ·
• Ian Thompson, son of Donald and
Gloria Thompson, Point Pleasant,
;were united in ~ on August
8 at the Heights United MelhQdist
Church. Rev. Bennie Stevens
officialed
the
double-ring

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P~ga , 86 . Sunday n~net

Pomeroy Mddleport-Galllpolla, OH Point PleUant, wv

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October 4, 1192 ·

October 4,.1892

G•lllpolla, OH · Point Plaaant, WV

Sunct.y

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Rutland church .to
celebrate ann1v
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RUTLAND • The Rutland ot
Church or Christ will celelirlle its
163rd year wilh a celebmtion on
Oct II.
The church is considered lhe
"mother" Church of Christ in lhe
county. It was lhe first church of
Christ in ·lhe area and olher grew
out of it
· A !rlstay of lhe Village of Rutland illustmtes lhe significance of
lhe church on New Lima Road.
In 1799, Brewsier Higley, a
Revolutionary War veteran from
Rutland County, VL, traveled wilh
his family 's flatboat up to lhe lhird
bninch of Leading Creek where he
built a home.
In 1801 , Samuel Denny, a Massachuseus school teaCher. built and
opened a school nearby. This was
the first school in Meigs County.
Higley sent five children to the
school and lhe olher four students
came from the settlement at the
mouth of Leading Creek. In 1802, Denny built another
school somewhere 'i::tose to
Higley's home. The next Ye&amp;f• Jbel
HigleY arrived wilh ~7 settlers and
his group, along with Brewster
Higley's family and Samuel
Denny and ·organized the town of
Rutland.
This was lhe si~ o(the fli'St sermon and church service conducted
by an ordained minister in Meigs
County. These Methodist services
were held in lhe home of Daniel
Rathburn. The next year, Rev. Eli
Stedman, a Freewill Baptist, held

setvices in Rutland at Denny's
School.
.
The first Church of Christ in
Rutland Township was organized
Nov. 8, 1829 in an old log house
belonging to elder Elijah Ralhbum,
in a field just across the creek on
Happy Hollow Road IIOI1h of Rut·
land. ·
_
There were about 30 persons
present at Ibis first meeting wilb IS
signing their names as charter
· members.
.
.
The ground now occupted by
the church ~as deeded to the
trustees of the Church of Christ Qn . '
Oct 20, 1886, by J.N ,, and Claqsa
Rathburn. The groun'd where the
parsonage was built was deeded to
the church on Sept 6, 1919 by the
,Rathbu\n heirs. The basement was
built and the chitrCh was moved to
the center of its lot in 1939. The
ch u~ch was incorpomted in July
1978.
· The p~sent building was .built
and deilicated Aug. 7, 1893 by J.C.
Zollar, presi~t Qf Hintm &lt;;ollege.
Prior to lhi~. church setvi~ were
held i~ ~ous homes oflhe con·
gregauon s mem~.
·
The church w•~ haye ~home­
commg Oct. II wtlh Erme John-·
son, former Rutland resident, serving as speaker. Sunday school will
begin at 9:30 a.m ..and worship service is at 10:30 a.m. A basket din·
nee wiD be served at noon. JohnsOn
will speak at 2 p.m. and lhere will
be special music from area church~·

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· MEMBERS • Pictured, (I to r), ,are members
of the GaUipolis Area Ostomy Association, ,Joy·
Cline, ET nurse-advisor; Edith Sisson, paSt

. • WQfS
. hlpers:
•
F.abnc
• .,
S.atln
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'S
fanatics .or just bad spellers?

-~ ~c::e; ~~~a!tia~: ::;~~:'

u '£tviN

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numJJQrs?
Are we on the verge of
an
underground
fabric war'/
.I feel it is necessary tQ inform
the public of this plague so we can
all work with' local authorities and
drive· out this problem before Gitllipolis becomes lhe subject of an
Oprah Winfrey episode. ("You find
a collection of satin underwear in
your son'~ drawer. Is he just a pervert or a member of a salinic cult?
Find out on the next Oprah.")
Most ea~ily seduced by the
salinic cults are leellagers, a rebellious group who will toni their
back on denim and cotton in favor
of satin just to Shock their parents.
Concerned moms and dads Should
keep an eye on their offsprings for
unusual stgns· such as hanging out

According to lhe Mormons, God
is a material being, who created the
univ~nc: ~ut of pre-existing matter.
All mdtvtduals can be saved and
many will betome divine. Most
~ther beliefs are traditionally Chris·
uan. The Mormons regard mainline
churches ,as apostate, corrupt. A
reorganized church (founded in
1860) rejects most Mormon doc·
trine and piliClicc except lhe Book
ofMorn10n.
.
.

POMEROY· The.Meigs County Bookmobile wilt make lhe fol. lowing stopS Ibis week: WEDNESDAY • Racine, 12 nOon to S p.m.,
and Portland, 6 to 7 p.m.; TIIURS·
DAY. Rutland, H a.m.to 3 p.m.,
Dexter, 4 to 6 p.m., Bradbury, 6:30
to 7:30 p.m.; FRIDAY - Tuppers
Plains, 12. noon 10 3 p.m.; Success
Road, 3:30 w 5:30p.m., Keno, 6 to
7 p.m.; SAT,URDAY - ~yrac~se., 9
a.m. 10 2 p.m., -and HarriSonvtlle, 3
. to 5 p.!l,l.

... - ''

ROBERT Ma(HOLLEY,·
M.D.
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FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
· WEIGHT CONTROL

New Stylj.t

Swan Pullinl

(304) 675-1675

I

J Showroom• of

Livinl Room
Furniture

Llrgllt
Selection At ·.
The Lowect
.Price• With ,
·R.S.V.P.

•

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SUG. RTL.

England .Sofa, As Shown Above
Eogland Loveseat, As Shown Above
England Chair, As Shown Above
Bushllne 2 Pc. Reclining Sofa W/Matching Chair
.
Norwalk 2 Pc. Colonial, Blue wlbutt011a, ~··Special
Norwalk 3 Pc. Colonial, Brown w/Oak Trim, Super Special
Bruard's 2 Pc. Reclining Sofa w/Matchlng Chair
Bruard's 4 P(:. Sectional, Blue. Manager's Special
Broyhill 2 Pc. Colonial
·
King Hickory 2 Pc. Colonial. Manager's Sptt~ial.
'
England Sofa, Mint Greltn
England Loveaelt. Mint Green
..... ···.,
England Chair. Mint Green
England Ottoman.
Green

7

R.S.V.P.
$479
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$31'9

$799
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$529
$1778
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$3177
$1630

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$199

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• . . $799
$419
$429

$489
$249

n::

$819

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7.42·2211

1·100·137·1217
MAIN, STREET • RUIWD, OHIO ·

·-

Gallia County calendar

Sunday, Oet. 4
PORTER - Porter U riited
Methodist Church homecoming
services, dinner at 12:30 p.m., fol·
lowed by Conrad Cook and lhe
Calvary Echoes singing at 2 p.m.

· '
Monday, Oc:t. S
GALLIPOLIS - Faith Temple
CROWN CITY - Special Independent Church revival, Oct.
singing at King's Chapel Church, S-10 wilh Brother Norman Taylor;
7:30 p.m., featuring Harold Clark Oct. 11 · 17 wilh Brother Darrell
· Gwinn.
·
·
family and Junior White.

WARE
. HOUSES

-GALLIPdLIS - Gallia Co11nty
Garden Club meeting, 7 p.m . at_
Columbus Southern Power Compa·

GALLIPOLIS - Jackson Harmoneues, 22 member chorus, concert at First Presbyterian Church, 3
p.m. Public is invite!~. .

GALLIPOLIS - The OFWCGFWC Gallipolis Junior Woman's .
Club meeting at St.. Peter's Episcop81 Church. New members meet at
6:30 p.m. SociaJ,at 6:45 p.m. Ice
brea~er at 7 p.m. and busine~s
meenng at 7:30p.m.

EUREKA : All day homecoming services at Eureka Church of
gpd wi~h Born Again Believers
sin(!ing at II a.m. Pastor Robert
Smtih.
,
CROWN CITY • Homecoming
services at Good Hope United Bapfls t Church, 10:30 a.m. Morning
and afternoon services wilh Rev.
Larry Haley and Rev . Raymond
Bragg preaching. Singers include
the Shafer and Queen families.
Lunch wiD be served. No evening
services. ·
.
~~CERVILLE · _Exod~s ~til
be sm~ at Mercervtlle Miss!O~·
~-!T.ust Church, 7 p.m. Pubhc IS
-mvt ·
.
EWINGTON _ Homecoming
and songfest at Ewington Church
CCU . Morning worship service
spe'akef , Rev. Darrell Dodrill;
songfest at 2:30 p.m. Singing by
Tom and Teresa Moore and intro;
ducing theEwington Youlh Choir.
viNToN- World Wide Pictures
film, "Eye of the Storm" will be
presepted at the FeUowShip Chapel ·
at 7 p.m. Public is invited.

: THURMAN - Kathy Brace
·11llie Ann Baity of Pomeroy
:: recently obtained an. Associates recently obtained an Associates
:· Degree o~ Applied Science in Den- Degree of Applied Science in Den.; tal Hygiene at Shawnee State ,Uni- tal Hygiene at Shawnee Suue Uni:; versity. While attending Shawnee, · ve~sity. While attending SSU,
·• she was on the dean's list and com- Batty was on the dean's list and
.. pleted her. Northeast Regional completed her National Dental
• Boards.
HygieneBpardexamination.
.. A 198S graduate..A&gt;f SouthwestA 1988 pduate of Meigs High
.. ern High School, Brace and her School; Bauy is the daughter o'f
: husband, Michael, reside at Tbur- Raymond and Shirley Baity.
·
:. man .- She is the daught~r of · . She is currently wQrlcing at Drs.,
_· William and Kathal~n Qamell of · Smtih and Jorgensen's office where
. Thurmll!'.
·
s.he was recendy promoted to full
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25th

Anniversar)t
. Sale
Announcing CUTE

Reuniou
CHESHIRE • Annual· Scott '
reunion Oct. 4, at Kyger Creek
Clubhouse. Dinner at I p.m.
CADMUS - Cadmus alumni
reunion, Oct. 4 at CJJ!mus High
Schoof Community Center, 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Catered lunch.
. GALLIPOLIS - Scott family
reunion, Sunday, Oct. 4, I pt.Jn.
wilh Marko lhe Clown.
•
(/16ms for tht community cal·
tndar tJpJifar two days prior to an
event. They 1/lliSt IH rtctlrtd by
the Gallipolis Dally Tribune In
odvattct for pllblkalion)

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Amps &amp; P.A.'s

GT80

"Amp ofthe Year"
1991
•2 y.r warranty eleettonlce
•1 y..,. warranty tpMker

BRUNICARDI'S
33D-2nd ·

GaUlpolla

446-0687 ·
"A Truered Neme In Muetc"

NEW SHIPMENT
.
JUST ARRIVED!

NURSE
MATES

•

. STRATUS

CAlUPOUS, 01• .

t's Posie
Patch
Presents A

74fdv$1295
Portrait Value· Ever! ·

·fALL I Rl DAl SALE

·

""""""",...,

SUNDAY, OCT. 41 I·~ P.M.
1 •'JEST IN IRIDAL IOUQUEIS
Ul
·
Dried &amp; Silk Only

CAKE TOP GIVEN AWAY
-REFRESHMENTs1462 SAILOR RD.

VINTON,

umJ~e.staf
. .f._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.!:::::::::::;::::::::::~~
'

- ·For That-Specia_l Occasion •

•

If you are planning a weddin9, then you shoulc;l
come see us at Hask1ns-Janner.
You will have over 190 styles of tuxedos to choose
from. We have a large selection olthe lalest styles
' and complimentary accessorie~ for this special
occasion.

: POMEROY - Ewings Chii!'ter
: Sons of the American Rcvolllbiln,
· Pomeroy, will be conducting grave
: marking services Tuesday, Oc't. 6 ·
: at noon for Palriot Silas Fearirig ai ·
•,lhe Rbund BOttom Cemetery, Bev- .
:. erly and following at the Hanilar
. : Cemetery, Marietta, for patriot :
, ·'Noah 11 . .
.
: , Serv:"ror Patriot David Reed
:,will be c9flducted at S·p.m'. at"the !
· Weldon &lt;::emeterr, Racine. 'All
' descendants of PatriotS FearinS and •
Reed are invited to attend any or ali ·
of the servic;es, as well as Daugh: : ters and Sons of the American Rev. olution or any interesled pelSOIIS•

'I

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Quality For•alw•ilr at

AHordaltle Pricas ·

GROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR MORE
'. · IN WEDDING PARTY
.
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I 7 P01 rrail
Clut~fma"J C01d~

. SUa.JECT FEE OF $2 PER PER~ ~ ~n portraltJ art tohn, oo! includ.d in odv.rtiaed .

1 1

_pficek. No dep?s il lr~uired. Po __ ~-Odverted~
~1ed ~ffoi~~ ~tion, ""' •io*krio~- · onpll""~l choice of .
bac ground. Your JUYOJile prf?Ps WWK;Om ,
10 nve q~MJ 101t0 pol!' en rur o IQnQ ~oit ioii.Ction wi'*1 no obligation far . purc~M.
valid witft any~~- 0,. odvet-tiled. pockoge
·per h;.mily. Portrait alzea opprdx1mote . Clwkhnu bodteiOuftd awa.llll Ol,no extra

ma.,..
•. t;IURifYI DOn't Miss Our Biwe•t·OHer Everl
IHIS AID I IIAIIIW l NUIAIIEIIMIItiO OPIIt
· . lloiiiiQ•IIt••Y• UhOO .....7.00 ~·
,'

.On S1.i,lay trOll Store 'r.~:A:IICl!ie IMr lefore Clo....

(LJ~fOmt ·r Sc•tVI(l'

II

ny:

group for persons who have
ostomies. Meetings arc held lhe
third Sunday of each month . A
newsletter is published prior to
each meeting. For more information or 10 be added to lhe newslet·
ter lis~ caU Phyllis Brown at 4465080 or Joy Cline at 67S-4340,
extension 387.

ROONEY - Brother Ivan French
will be speaking at Faith Baptist
Church, SR 35. Servicc;s begtn_at
10:45 a.m. and 2 p.m. No evenmg
services. Oct. 5-7 services begin at
7 p.m. nightly. Public is irlvited.

:&gt;-.. ' •

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VINTON • Morgan-Bethel Missionary Baptist Church worship
services at 1 p.m., with speaker
Minister WiUiam C. Ward.

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MERCERVILLE - Rev. Robert
Pearson preaching 7 p.m. at lhe
Bethlehem Church on Rocky Forie
Road off SR 218. All welcome.

inj~GaUipolisAOAisasupport

KATHY BRACt:

. Services slated

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WAYEnEIIAU

. :~ ssu grads join staff'
JULIE BAITY

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$969
$111
$1199

$2016

$1949
$1658 '·

•'

· Drs.She
ts currently
employed
by ·
Smilh
and Jorgensen
and Dr.
Kennelh 0. Kyger.
•

·RUTLAND-- FURNITURE-.~

SHOW
ROOMS · ..

RUTLAND - Leadinl! Creek
-Conservancy District wdl make
repairs to lhefr raw water line on
Monday and Toesday. Water customers should malte necessary provisions during this time to conserve
water.
· ·

·. LIVING .ROOM SUITE ·STOREWIDE
PR.ICED TO SELL
!II

giraffes.
·
Betsy Dresser, director of the
zoo's center, said she hopes the
workshop will help build a larger
network of researchers. Fewer t11an
50 researchers now wOrk on cryogenies, she said.
Ms. Dresser has successfully
transplanted embryos of threatened
species into surrogate molhers. ,
She first transplanted a previ·
ously frozen embryo of a bongo
antelope into a common eland antelope in 1983. In lh&lt;; past decade,
Cincinnati researchers have had
other successes...
An endangered guar calf was .
born•to a Holstein cow, and aJI.
~=fti~atdesert cat was born to a
"You can literally keep a
species from exlinction. To me,
that's a very powerfullhing," Ms .
Dresser said.
If the technology had been
·available millions· of years ago,
dinosaurs could have been kept
from extinctipn, she said. _

LCCD to make repairs

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to' share information on a new teChnique to store the germ plasm, or
reproductive organs, of animals
and plants.
'
Th~; proce~~ is _called cryopreservaubn, which mvolves freez'
in" the "erm plasm of plants and
arumals tl) liquid nitrogen. Conser·
vation efforts include preservation
of frozen embryos, animal semen
andplanttissueandseeds.
·
_Scientists are most concerned
with freezing !he'germ plasm of big
an_imals thitt demand a large habi·
tat, such as elephants, rhinos and

R.S.V.P. - Thit phrase is revolutionizing furniture sh&lt;lpPing .at Rutland Furniture. Whenever you
see it, whenever you hear it, you'll knpw you are gelling the BEST possible price. No dickenng.
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sale prices, everyday. So remember the phrase, R.S.V.P. - Rutland Furniture's Showca511 Valul!
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I

•

CINCINNATI (AP) ..:... A small
· ~ network of _scientists worldwide.is
:· freezing the essence of plants and
:: animals to try to prevent lhem from
:~ going th~ way.of the dinosaur.
."I think we know ... that every:: thing is about'to go down the tubes.
-:.If we don't succeed, then we don't
:· 'have a fllture," said Gren Lucas, a
-: researcher at the Royal Botanic :, Gardens of Kew, in the United
·• Kingdom.
.
:
Lucas and about SO other
I ; researchers gathered at the Cincin"' · ,, nati Zoo's Center for Reproduction;.
, of Endangered Wildlife; last week
'
~

· Gallipolil

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•
25TH &amp;JEFFERSON AVENuE ..
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•

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.
surgay. They include peilple of ail
The conference provides a . ages, races. O'Ccupalions and. edmic
sponsored two of its members,' national forum for ostomates to backgrounds. · Approximately
Edith Sisson and Doris Lillico, to join together for mutual support
70,000 new ostomy surgeries are
· attend lhe aMual United Ostomy
Apvroximately one million performed each year. The surgery
Association conference in Pitts- Amencans have had ostomy ts required when a penon has lost
-----~----.;....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,;._ · normal bowel or bl8dder function
·
because of birth defects, disease or
Area Ostomy Association recendy

book receive significant editorial,
The 1993 Marauder staff is
photOf!!Phic and business experi- composed of Tyler Wolfe, Lessie
ence, said Eleanor McKelvey, Osborne, Cora See, Allison GaoMarauder yearbook advisor.
away, Jared Stewart, Kelly SalterThrough the hard WQrk of the . field, Jason Witherell, Marlo
staff and the generosity of local White, Bec!cy Williams, Eric
businesses, Meigs High has been , White, Sheryl Thoma, Stephanie
able to provide·a book of memories See, Misli Powell, Tessie Bradfor lite students and interested indi- shaw; Sherry Johnson, Kyia Sellvi duals. Plans and work have ers, Yvette Young, Misti King,
begun on lhe 1993 edition of lhe Jana Dailey, Sonja Bateman, Butch Marauder.
Bradshaw and Joy O'Brien.
The first Marauder yeru:book'
Stephanie Price, editor, Mary
Grueser and Becky 'Meier, assistanl sales campaign will be lhis week.
editors, and Eleanor McKelvey, The 1993 book can be ordered by
advisor, have attended a four:day prepaying $20.-Name engraving on
Jos.ten Yearbook workshop at the cover is $2 extra and plastic
Denison University.
coverS are an additional $1.

•·• .::.~:.:::.:::.:._ _!:::::::::::::::::::::~

·Carnival planned
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Elementary will hold its
annual carnival Saturday.
The kitchen will be open from
5-9 p,m. and-games will be held
· from 6-9 p.m.
There will t?e games, door
· prizes, c_ake walks, a ~ and
more.
'
,• '
The public is invited.

.POMEROY , The Meigs High
School 1993 Marauder Yearbook
Staff will join nearly 50,000 other
staffs across the nation to celebmte
Natipnal Yearbook Week (Oct. 4, 10).
· National Yearbook Week has
been celebrated nationally since
· 1987 when former President
Ronald Reagan joined the Senate
and lhe House of Representatives
of the United States 10 an official
pfllCiaination recognizing lhe week.
The school yearbook provides a
, ·pictorial and historical document
. which has been ~~fe:rtant part
· 'of lhe culture for
es. "Young
people who produce a school year-

b~h, Pa.

GALLIPOLIS • The Gallipolis

"

_Staff to celebrate National Yearbook Week

_:

·;; The m.eaning
of Mormon.

· Meigs bookmobile
· schedule announced

.

YEARBOOK WEEK OBSERVED- The
. · this week. Pictured as they examine· a yearboOk
are: l·r, Stephanie Price, editor; Eleaaor McK. Meigs Hi&amp;h School 1993 Marauder Yearbook ·"1
elvy, advisor; and Mary Grueser and Becky,
Stall jolu nearly 50,000 other stall's across the
Meier, asslsta"t editors.
· ·
- nation to celebrate National Yearbook Wee,k
(;.'
.
1·'

Harper, Belpre; Roger Swartz ,·
Columbus; Tracy Donohue, Garland, Texas; Jerry and Janet Carter,
Rocky Mt., N.C.; Opal Powell,
Gallipolis; Daise Bibbee, Coolville;
Peter, Lynn Bauer, Arlington, Va.;
Bob and Sina May, Amy and Traci
'Murphy, Tuppers Plains; Gerald,
Linda, Amber and Michael Summerfield, Coolville; Mike Zepfed,
COolville; Kurt, Debbie, Michael,
'Adam and Lori , New. London;
Tom, Carolyn and Crystal Summerfield; Medina; Harold Lamb,
Charleston, W.Va.; Stanely, Doris
Ann Harrison, Great_Falls, Va.
Opal Parvel was lhe oldest person attending; Annie }{arper,
youngest girl; Cory Vales,
youngest boy; Tracy Donohue ,
traveled the farlhest
Two marriages were noted: Lori
Adams and Douglas Warden,
March 28; and Bobby Parker and
Cori Lee Bell, July 10.
·
The reunion will be at the.same
.place next year.

CH:tiiGli:tPj:iNiNt:'

· C' i

•

.Several attend reunion

Last week 1 stumbled upon evi-·
. :•:~~~;:_ · ~'i,•'
· Manetta; Bo)Jby. and Con Lea
dence that a Strange and mysterious I fii1Fl'&lt;..;ti..·~ ~'l'
·:.&gt;».'l:lfl Parker, Crown Pomt, Ind.; Nancy
cult may be at work in the Galli~·~f~~J,..~. :. ~~[ · .;;'.:f,~!J.(~~;-Campbell, Racine\ !'lick and Ryan
lis area. I feel it is necessary to-:-·
Adams, Doug, Lon, Stacy, Dere~
lhe
people
of
this
plague
on
:0,';.'1j,,
.
.~:
·...
..·.,
•
....
-~··1,_;;.
and
l'n'orm
II
~"'''U'' ... ~ . ...
· ~~~ • •
' '':t~, .. B
IChnstopher
f ' Warden,
ld c Racme,
I
society so they can take the proper ~.I)!&lt;: ~,;., 1 ;:: . '''J·''f·••;.ijf.i'P~.. •J·.(.' ue Summer 1e ,. bar eston.
precautions to J,lrotect themselves ~~
~pf}j~O'N:
W.Va.; ~a Pearl Summerfield.
and their expenstve bed Sheets. .
~::;:~.
~'~\';
_ Atlanta, Ga., S~~y Summerfield,
Wl)ile photographing some con.. ·.·•• ··
~·. ...
Buffalo,_ W.Va ., Rc:x ~nd. Ann
struetion work in the basement of in fabric stores, skiri raShes when Summerfield, Reedsvtlle, Mildre~
,an old building downtown, I they wear rough fabrics and an . and Mathew Caldwell, Reedsville:
noticed someone had spmy-painted unexplainable interest in collecting _ AI and Sharon Donahue, Coolvtlle,
bone-chilling graffiti on the wall: lingerie.
Rena, Mtche_lle, Dana and Cory
. .SATIN RULM. .
Satin . worshipers als~ idolize Val~s•.Coolvtlle; Roome, Robm, .
Yes, it's true, satin worshipers Liberace, who they beheve was Chnsu _ and Cam Russel_l,
are in the area. This is no Iaughipg sent to earlh to model their holy' · C~olviiie; Bob, Tena and Anme
matter! These maniaCal zilalots wifl fabric in large, taSteless quantities.
do anythin' to get their h3nds on A sure sign of satin fanaticism is a
Look What is Happening
the expenst ve fabric described in collection of Liberace albums hid. at Hair Happening
Webster's Dictionary as "having a den among a son's or daughter's
glossy face and a soft, slippezy tex- Paula Abduls and Marty Marks. A
. PEl,WS $25.(10 .
tore."
·
shrine topped with a candelabra is
My discovery led me to do some anolher sure sign.
Special ~raps Slishtly HiBh:er
Local authorities have not
investigatinf, but no other evidence
of the cult s existence could be reported any unusual complaints;
HAIRCUTS $7.00
found. I looked around for the there have not been any incidents
Kids 12 &amp; Under $5.00
burnt remains of polyester (used by of cmzed fanatics worshiping in ..
satin worshlpers in sacrificial cere- fabric stores before bolts of satin;
SHAMPOO/CUT/STYLE
monies), but apparendy the faithful nor any shopliftings involving bed
had cleared out all removable signs sheets. This leads me to believe lhe
$10.00 "
of their pmctices w~ they aban- cultists are not only w~ird, but
doned the building. ' ·
snealcy as well.
,.
This leads to a number of quesMore reports will be made as
lions: What drove lhem.out? Could this story develops.
there be a band of silk worshipers
' in the area that drove out the satin
Kevin. PinSon is a news writer
446·3353
SUver Bridge
worshipers ,by sheer suength of for Ohio Valley P_ublisbing.

GROUPS TO PERFORM· Upper Room Prom9tions presents'
live in eonc:ert The McKamey's (bflow),'on Nov. 5 at 8 p.m. at the
State Theatre, Main St., Point Pleasant. Opening for the gospel
group wUl !It the female trio from Vinton, Voices of Life, (above).
Memben IDc:lude Taml Thomas, (standmg), Donna Thomas (seated left), ud Debbie HaD, (seMed riJht). Mikey Chapman will also
be performing. Abuodant Life ChriStiaD Ceoter or Point Pleasant
is refllrblshiag the approximately 600 seals in the state theatte for
· its new c:hurcb. Tic:kels are $9 aDd are available at WiUa's Bible
Bookstore, Point Pleasant, the Guiding Light Bookstores, or by
calling 446-2820 or 675-6495;

'

'

Rutland Church of Christ

•

GAOA-members attend conference

SUNDAY SINGE~- The Bora Agala BeUevers will be per·
fo,rmlng at the Eureka Cbureh of God during homecoming ser.· •
vices at 11 a.m. on Sunday. ~lured are members (I to r): Randi
Smith, Mike Broyles, KeDy Broyles, Karen The"" Christi Smitli,
and Amber Smith; seated, David Smith, director; back, Bob Theiss, soundman.
,
·

· · BLENNERI{ASSETT ISLAND
- The Lamb, SUmmerfield reunioq
was held recendy at Blennerllassett
Island. Sb.erman Summerfield,
president, asked lhe blessing.
Attending were Pearl and Roger
Summerfield, Murrysville, Pa.;
Sherman, Terssa, Tar~ and Whitney, Lltlle HocJ,ing; Bill and Lor·

president; Dorls .Lillico, president elect; and
_PbyUss Brown, ET nurse-advisor.

)r ;~
1 ,...,

•'

Call 1800 438 8861

1 ,

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October 4, 1112

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.

ing the ball for 13:01 of the periOO. ·
· Wesi Virginia ended the Eagles' shutout string.it
203 minutes on a one-yard scoring run by fullback
Rodney Woodard early in the second period.
Woo:&lt;Wd set up the score by going 47 yards on the
preVIOUS play.
·
· .
J1:1urreliii1Jlde il 14-3 with a !().yard score at 4:01
left1n the half.
-·
But Boston College scored with 36 seConds left ih
the hatf on an 18-yard pass from .Foley 10 Clarence
CaniiC?", who caught the ball a8 he was faDing backward m the end zone 10 cut it to 14-10.
. The Eagles took a 24-17 lead wid! 2:23 left in the
thrrd a seven-yard run by Dwight Shirley. Murrell
~ent ~ yards down the sideline with 7:33 left tO tie
II agatn.
' The Mounlaineers gained 355 yards against the
Eagles, ·who llad been holding opponents 10 216 a
game. The Eagles had 479. yards, with Dukes and
Shrrley (23 rushes, 89 yards) often running through
tackles.
Foley had no lrouble fmding open receivers. Tight
end Pete Mitchell had eight catches for 91 yards. Foley has 5,320 Jli!SSing yards, second in BC history to Doug Fluue's 10,579. Foley moved past
Shawn Halloran, who had 5,252 fards.
·.

BADGERS CELEBRATE-Wiscoosin kick·
er Rich Tllompson (18) and teammate Tony
Spaeth celebrate 1 first-quarter field goal dUring

Silturdlly's Bl1 Ten opelier apinst No. 12 Ohio
State In Madison, Wis., whlcll the Badiers woo
20-16.(AJP)
.

·Toronto shuts out Detroit 3-0
flag again
to capture AL East
.
.

-

TORONTO (AP) - Juan GuzCincinnaii, which won 9l
man pitch~ the 'I;oromo Blue Jays games in 1990 en route to a World
into.lhe playoffs and may .have put Series title, will fmish second to
himself in the rotation,IOO.
Atlanta in the NL West this year.
The Blue Jays clinchtd their
Bip Roberts didn't play Satursecond'straight AL East title and day because of a sore leg, leaving
fourth 'in eight years as Guzman his average at ,324. He is six points
blanked Detroit on one hit for eight behind San Diego's Gary Sheffield
innings Saturday in a 3-1 victory.
in the NL batting racem and would
Joe Caner hit his 341h home run have to go 6 for 6 on Sunday to
for a 2-0 lead in the fmt and Dave overtake him. Roberts was limping
Winfield celebrated his 41st birth· after fouling a pitch off his leg Friday with a run-scoring grounder for day night
his 108th RBI.
Bobby Ayala (2-1) gave up one
That was plenty for Guzman, run and four hits in 6 2-3 innings
who may have found a place in for his second major-league viciOmanager CiiO Gaston's posiseason ry.
plans by allowing ·only Mark
Cincinnati scored four runs off
Carreon's leadoff single in the Larry Carter (1-5), who lasted just
sixth.
·~
four innings.
•
But once again, winning a key
. Orioles ?,Indians 1
game once again wasn't easy for ·
At·Qeveland, Ohio, Cal Ripkcn
the Blue Jays. Detroit loaded the Jr. homered for his.sixth straight hit
KELCHNER SCRAMBLES """West Vir·
No. 22 Boston College In Morgantown, W.Va., -, bases off Tom Henke with one out and.drove in three runs Saturday as
glala quarterback Jake Kelchner (17) scrambles . · which resulted in a 24-24 tie, (AP)
in the ninth on two singles and the Baltimore Orioles beat the
tor a nrat down durlDR. Saturdlly's,pme against .
walk. After Rob ~r popped-up, · Cleveland "Indians 7-1.
"
Henke forced in a run by walking
Ripken, who is scheduled to
Scott was
Livingstone,
and out
Duane
play in his
is
)I
Ward
needed 10 close
the finishing
the!,SOOth
season game
with a today,
flourish.
clincher. Ward got Dan Gladden on He had two singles and a home run
apopupforhis12thsave.
' inhisfirstthreeat-bats ,Saturday,
TheBioeJayswentintotheday: aftergettinghitsinhislastthreeal.
w.ith a magic number of one to · bats. the previous nighL He homeATHENS, Ohio (AP) _ Quar· overall and 3-1 in the MAC}.
Tom Dubs started a1 quarterback eliminate Milwaukee. They were red twice and drove in seven runs
terback Marcel Weems ran for 1.46
Ak!'on rolle~ up _342 r'!shing for the Bobcats, comJ)Ieling 7 of 18 able to fmish off baseball's final in the two games. His hit string
yards and a touchdown· and yards m54 cames while Oh10 was passes for 71 yards with one inter- race the way they wanted, winni'!g ended when he popped to shortstop
Akron's defense forced five totaling 166 yards on 40 atiempts. ception. He was relieved by on their home Held, as they had m in the seventh.
• hll'IJOVers .and !Umed away several Darrien Gol!ch added. 94 yards on Waverly graduate D.R. Robinson, clinching their three previous diviToday' s · game will be his
Ohio scoring threats as the Zips 18 attempts for the Zips, who had who completed 3 of 5 fa' 34 yards sion titles.
'
1,735th in a row, leaving him 395
won 13-0 in a Mid-American Con- two.other players add 40 yards wid! one mrerception.
·
The Blue Jays will begin the AL - short of Lou Gehrig's record. Ripfc.ence game Salurday.
apiece.
Tim Curtis had 96 yards on 22 playoffs WednC$day night1\1t_Sky- ken could catch Gehrig during the
Weems carried just 12 times, . Ohio fell to 1-4 overall and 1-3 carries for Ohio.
'
Dome against Oakland, widi Jaek 1995 season.
but one was for a 39-yard touch- m the ~c;:.
Jobn Carroll 30, Olllo Northern
Morris to probably face Dave
Arthur Rhodes (7-5) held Oeve.doWII thai broke a scoreless dead·
Ohio failed to score on two pos·
6
Stewart in a. matchup of two of the land scoreless until Reggie Jeffer. loi:k in the second· quarter On the- sessions inside the 20 and on two
At Ada, Ohio, Bruce Saban best,big-gan\e pitchers ever. Toron- son homered with one out in the
p~y. Weems vaulted !he Jlne on a other .times missed short field - rushed for 149 yards ,and three 10 and the A's split 12 g811)es this. sixth, his rust. Rhodes allovted 10
tbtrd-and-3 'keeper .and went goals.
touchdowns as John Carroll won a season. .
hits in 6 2-l innings, striking out
untouched into the end woe.
Weems also completed 7 of 21 battle of unbeatens with a 30-6
Rookie David Haas (5-3) lost six and walking three. Mark
Daron Alcorn added field goals passes for 102 yards with no inter· Ohio Confe~ victory over Ohio for Detroit He gave up a single to Williamson finished for his first
of 21 atld 22 yards for Aleron (3-l ceptions.
.
Northern Saturday.
Devon White 10 start the game, and save.
C8rta' connected one out later. On
Alan Embree (0-2) gave up four

De"'en.·s.e.-k·eys Akr,on's .13-.o·WI. n
.
M·
·
A
c
(! oh· u nlversl
.
..
·t·
10
Over
Oe
Y

Missouri downs Marshall44-2t ·

.
.
. ·
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) _· Joe among the highest in school history
Free1J1811 tied a school record with' and just short of the QlCord of 665
four touchilowns and Missouri set in 1949 against Kansas.
rolled up 641 yards in ending an
Missouri also apparently ended
. eight-game losiitg stre1t wilb a 44- a quart.erbaclt controvcny as starter
. , ,21 victory over MarshaU on Satur· Ptill Johnson led the Tigers 10 41
day. .··
.
.
· points before sitlini out the~ of
Freeman ran for 90 yards on 1.8 the game. Johnson, who had split
carries and scorcil his first four · timewithJeffHandythcfiratthree
lollchdowns ci the year on tuns of games, completed. 20 of 28 passes
- 7, 20, 19 and 1 .yards for Missouri for 260 yll'lla With one in~.
(1·3), 6Qua1ina a lliCord sJuired' by - Johnson, still without a touch·
three othen. -Marsllall (3··1), the . ~lawn pass, had the hot ha!ld at the
. IOp·ranted school in Divis1on .1; . stan of each half, guidirig Missouri
· AA, bad allowed 51. poiniS in itS . 10 a 17-0 lead midWI)' lhrough the
finlttlnepmes.
':
· ·. . Second (ptanet and completing his
The total offense mark was · fust six passes of the second half

·
·
for 102 yilrds.
. Receiver Victor Bailey had his
second straigllt 100-yard receiving
day, catching' eight passes for 134
yards before leaving at the end of
the third quarter with a dislocated
· left lbumb. Jeff·Jackc added three
field goil!s. m'oving into .second
place ob th~&gt; school's career list
with 33; He's 11 behind career
leader -Tom Wbelihln (1984-87).
Marsball was unauccessfullrying an onside kick after Michael
Payton's 10-yard tQuc:hdnwn )181s
. to Troy Brown with 9:191eft in the
third quarlllr bad cut Missouri's
lead 10 24-14.
,•

..
'

-

m Kyle Fiel_d history lor a Tech-A&amp;M game.
Tech twtce called timwuts to rattle Venetoulias
but he kicked the bal~ squarely between the uprights
and was mobbed by hts ICammates.
·
No. 21 Boston Collq~ 24; W. VIrginia 24 - At
Morgantown, W.Va., David Mayfield blocked a 4 3yard field goal attempt by David Gordoli with 19 scconds left 10 preserve West Virginia's 24-24 tic with
N(l. 22 Boston College Saturday.
·
It was the second tie this season for the Mountaineers (3-0-2), who were led by lailback Adrian
Murrell's 150 tards on 16 carries.
· _ ·
Boston Co lege (4-0-1), which had a string of
three suaight shutouts Slll!pped, gol 140 yards on 28
carries from Chuckie Dukes. Glenn F(lley added. 252
yards while completing 20 of 31 passes 10 become
the No. 2 passer _
in school history· ·
·
Dukes' hard .running set up the kick attempt by
Gordon, who had made his fiJ'St college field goal, a
24-yarder, in lhe Hrst quaner:
,
Dukes had 36 yards in BC 's final drive, which ·
slal1ed at the Eagles' 20 with 4:011eft
·
The Eagles, who eniQ'ed the game ranked fourth
nationally in IOial defense, started the game with a
dol!linating offensive display. But Boston College
fmtshed the fi!St quarter ahead only 3-0 despite hold-

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.
-.
~~RICK GANO
,
. - Sam Veit froni geitint off Jijs tick. Marlon Kerner
. MADISON, Vf1S. (AP) - ~ll ~veil s ~hit Veit, forcing a fumble that rolled out of bounds at .
mg k;eYed two third:c~uaner sconng drives and Wisthe Wisconsin eighL
. .
CQnsm sto~ Oh10 State on fourth do"':n at the .
. Two nlays later Harris ran five yards for the
Badgers' 2:hnlh 2:15 left Sabirday, presemng a 20touc~.
•
_
.
·16 ~~of the No. 12 ;Buckeyes.
.
Wisconsin moved 10 inSide Ohio State one on its
~railin,g 20-10, Ohio S.tate. scored on. Kir!' Herb-_
.
firs_1..,......ion of the I!JIJIIe,· but couldn't get 1.n10 the
tre1t three ani
B
S bl
th 4 29
.-,.-;--~d S . ·Y · pass '!&gt; nan ta em WI
•
end zone. Thompson ticked an 18-yard field goal.
t, C;BPP1114 a 7().yard drive.
'
·•
.
Tim Williams lllcked a 3().yanJeriO tie the game
WISCOns'!l !hen ;-vas called-for a ~IUil f~ on
in the second quaner. .
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!he e.xlrll porn~ which was good. Ohio State decided
No. :Z Miami 19, No. 3 Florida St. 16 -' At
10 take the po':"l off the board and g«;~ for two from
Miami, Fla., For -the second suaight year, Miami
!he one-~-line, but Raymont ~~ was stopped
pulled off a miracle victo'y over Florida Stale when
short, le&amp;YIDI !he Buc:keyes four pomts back.
the Seminoles missed 8 field goal iii the closing secThe Buckeyes (3-1) got !he ball back at the Bad·
onds.
gcrs' 41 after • siiCll't punt _and moved to the 26. On
The 'second-ranked Hwricancs escllped wilh a 19_
{ouJ"t!l-and-fivc, Herbslrel_l w~ dragged down ·by
16 victory over the No. 3. Seminoles on Saturday
Reli!e Hoi~ after.a three-yard gam.
when Dan Mowrey mis1ed a 39•yard field goal
Wiscon~n '!'Oved f~ a fust. down and !hen ran . altempton thefmal play of the game. ·
out the. clock m ~ btggest ~ICtory of thitd-year
It was eerily reminiscent of last year's game,
coach BI!R)' Alvarez s career with the BII'!Jers. .
which Miami woo 17-16 when Florida Stale's .Geny
Bevell, a ~-Y~oC?Id fteslunan, Jed WISConsm (3·
Thomas missed a J4-yard field goal with 25 seconds
1) on long drives on 1ts fust two setond-half possesremainin .
s1ons be~ore a raucous, SIDI:soaked crowd of 72,203
Miamf(4-0) took a 17_16 lead on Gino Torretta's
and a national cable 1V audience.
hdo
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33 -yard lOut wn pass _10 Lamar Th«;~n;tas With 6..50
Wisconsin, down 10-3 a1 half and unable 10 break
through against the Buckeyes defense, took the kick~
left an~ added a safety wtth 2:59 re~atnmg.
offand moved 78 yards in 13 plays fora tying touCh·
_Flo.nda_State (4-l) dro":"e from 1ts own 19 10 t!'e
down 00 Brent Moss' five-yard nm. Bevell completMiam! 22m !he closmg mmuleS and went for the f:!e,
ed five passes during the drive for 41 yards.
a l!lcuc. Semmol.es coach Bobb~ B?wden_has dtsOn·Ohio State's next possession, Gary Casper
d_ained ~~ the past. Bu! ~owrey s kt~k saded wide
intercepted a tipped pass This time the Badgers
J'!ght -Just as Thomas did last year- and the Hur· 11 p1a • • the ' ahead touCh
ncanes mQbbed each other on the field,
ed 58. 'tards m
do':n.
ys .or
go_,
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l_t was Mi;mri 's seventh win in its last eight games
Beven, who was .on a Monnon mission in 1990
agj!j181 ~onda State.
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0 • Te.us A&amp;M 19, Texas Tee~ 17 -At and 1991, hit a 13-yarder to Tim Ware, a IS-yard
shovel pass 10 Moss a 16- arder to Lee DeRamus
C~lege Stauon,_T.exas, Terry Vc:netuuhas! whose
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Y.
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mtssed extra pomt put No. 5 Texas A&amp;M m sn~ve
and an 11-yarder 10 Michael Roan, setnng up Moss
· danger, kicked a 21-yard field goal as time expiied
~':!;n made it 20-10 when Rich Thompson
S~lurday 10 keep the Aggies oodefeated wjth a 19-17
.
fi
ld
oal
'th
lef
vtciOry
over Texas Teclt
'
kicked a ·31· ·Yani. e g WI _6:45 L
.
Jon Davis kicked a 30-yard field goal inw a stiff ·
Bu~ ~trell "??k the Buckey~ 76 yards m 13
wind with 5:19 left to giv_uhe Red Raiders (2-3
plays m Just two mmutes--:- connecung on a 28-yard
overall, 1-1 Southwest Conference) a 17-161ead.
pass 10 Jeff Cothran on third-and-22. And after the
But quarterback Jeff Granger directed the Aggies
first of three personal fouls on the Badgers moved
(5-0, 1-0) on a 7().yard drive agairist the clock. A&amp;M
the ball to the II, he passed to Stablem for the touchconverted a fourth down on the drive and Granger hit
down.
.
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tight end Greg Schorp for 13 yards 10 get the Aggies
Beve~l fimshed I 8 for . 30 for 214 yards, while
into Held goa1 position. •
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Herbs!"l1t was 20 of 33 for .216. .
,
Vene10ulias had missed an extra point after a 22- Ohio State took a 10-3 halfume lea&lt;J when T1to
yard touc:hdown run by Rodney Thomas to set ihe
Paul rushed through and prevented Badgers punter
stage for a possible upset before 69,817 fans, largest

REG.L99

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Section
C
sin··~posts _20-1_
6 ·upset ~in oyer ·_Ohio State:

;

MoRday-)bq, SUnday
8 AM-10' PM ..
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'298 SECOND ST.
l · POMEROY, OH . ..
WE 'RESERVE
II.GHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD· SUN., OCT. 4 THRU OCT. 10, 1992
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and Scott Cooper added a solo shot
Saturday as the Boston Red Sox
rallied 10 beat the New Yme Yankees 7-5.
·
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New Y_ork, battling Cleveland
and Detroit for fourth place in the
AL East, scored all its runs, in dte ·
third, taking a 5-I lead. But
Boston, which will finish last for
the first time since I 932 scored
two in the fourth, three in 'the fifth
and one ,!/! the sixth.
Scott"Taylor (1-1) pitched 6 2-3
scoreless innings, retiring his Hnal
17 batters.
·
. Piantier hit his seventh homer
o_ff Scott Sandei'S9n (12-11) in the
fifth after Cooper singled. Tom
Brunansky doubled-later in the
inning and Bob Zupcic tripled ..
Cooper hit his fifth homer in the
sixth.
.
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Boston's Mike Gardiner is winltiss as a starter since May.
Mets 2, Pirales 1
At New York, N.Y., 'Dwight
Gooden pitched a four-hitter for his
second complele game in three
starts, and the New York Mets beat
the Pinsburgh Pirates 2-1 Saturday
10 ensure they won't linisli last in
the NL East. .. _
,
Gooden (10-13) finished with
lhe fmtlosing season in .his nineyear career. He struck out three and
walked one in h.is. low-hit game
since a two-hitter againSt Philadelphia oo JIDie 23, 1990.
Danny Jackson (8-13)' allowed
both runs and four hits in four
innings, stnick out four and walked
one. He is scheduled 10 pitch Game
2 of the NL playoffs against •
Atlanta On Wednesday.
. .
. Ryan ~Ompson wallced .open,
mg the ru:st, Dave Gallagher singled, Thompson stole third and
Chico Walker hit a sacrifice fly.
Shortstop Jay Bell dropped Kevin
Bass' popup for two-base error as
Gallagher scored.
· Bell singled with two outs in the ·
six hits in
seventh
scored on Andy Van
Alomar and Candy Maldonado
Ripken sin$led home Balti- Slyke's and
double. Bell had two of
. ~~hit two-run homer in the fiJ'St more's fust rim m the lhirl!. and the Pittsburgh. s hits.
IDIUDg.
.
Orioles scored two in the fifth more
Phillles 3, Cardlolils 1
Another iello8t crowd at Sky- when Luis Merccdes'!
'ngle got
·
At
St. Louis, Mo .. Ruben
Dome got louder as the game wore past left fielder •Thom Howard
Amaro
.homered in the eighth
on. Aboul 80 sinlll Cana!Jian flw for a two-base error. · en fol·
inning
and
Jim Lindeman singled
' were bung from the mezzanine .for lowed with a two-run
er, his
10
break
a
riinth-inning
tie Saturday
this fm8l series of lbc season as the , ·14th, on Mike ChristoPhe ·'S sec·
as the Philadelphia Phillies. lllllie4
· · baliP&amp;it wa ~ for the JIOS· Olld pitch:
·
· sibilitj--now .thecertainty ,._ that
Baltimore added a ru·n .in the. to beat the St Louis Cardinals 3-2.
Philadelphia had taken a 2-1
the playoff$ would soon visit
· sixlh when the Indians misplayed
Reds 6, Glanta1
Steve Scarsone's llunt. letting Bill lead iii the eighth on Amaro's sevAt Cincinnati, Ohio, Dave Mar-- Ripken score from second, and ' enth home run of the season; 11 two•'tinez .and Willie· Greene homered another on Mark Parent's bonier in run drive off Onuir Olivares; .:
. St. Louis, which hl\d won roW:
Saturday as the Cincinn_ati. Reds the eighth, his second.
straight, tied the score in the .bot· ·
beat the-San Francisco Oi8nts 6-1 .
· Red' Sox 7,Yukees 5-' ,
for .tlleir second 90-viclliry seaspn
At Boston, Mass., pinch-hitter tom half on .Luis Alicea's RBI -sin- ,
-in three years.
Phil Plantier had·1a two-run homer gle.

~~~~~:~h~~r;r!t~e:~~=- ~~:~g~~d

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C2 Sunday l1me8 S•ntlnel

:&lt;:·

to post .3-~ record ·

8 SCOTf WOLFE
crunch time came. tbC SHS.defcnse 35-yani"pass 10 Dill put SHS near
;:j t 1 LlltiMt.Cma Mptllldelit
had done its job. Singtecon,Jamey the 20, w~ Gaul brooght on AI-_
·:•:RACINE - 1D what many de- Smith, Adams, Glam YOIDig, Kyle dama to kick a 32-yard fiel~ goal
~~ u lhe bigges&amp; win in South- W1cklinc, Trcn~ Cleland, Sa!" from the left hash mark wnb l1
;eta football history, the mighty . Shain and Rob,Hill each rnadc.b1g seconds ~ft to put Sou~~
•SsJudacm Tornadoes toot an early plays and were involved when a 17-6.
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'li!d. then beld on 10 defeat Divi- host of Tornadoes swarmed the
That boot tS believed 10 be the
IV Chesapeake 23-22 Friday fumbled, yet recovered ball by . longes&amp;, if ~ot the only fleJ4 goal in
~at ROger Lee Adams Memo- Pyles. ·
Southem history.
·
:rli Field.
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SHS then was stOpped' on three • ~~pcake mBICI!ed the open·: •l.ut week, Dave Gaul's Toma- downs.
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ang lddc of the second half qu!CkiY .
:~ faired wen against regioaially
The Panthers agam ~asted no to ·the Southern 35. Fac!l" w1th a.
·e~tb-ranked Division Ill South time, !Jiking over on thru own 34- fOI!rlh ~ one, Southern s defense
Point, tbcn pulled aU tbe right yard line~ a 48-yl!fd pun! froqt held agam. Southern went three .
fi(ings this w,::~a. inst the Evans. On DID~ p!Jiys, C~ drove plays and punted.
eighth-ranked c
e Panthers 66 yards to pardirt. sconng on a
On the ~t retum ~unyon f~­
.(3-2) Southern (3-2) is in Division broken play by Pyles. Pyles was on bled, but recove~ h1s own mlsY. ·
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the ~eceiv!Jlg end of the option to cue, one of fi~ bnles the Panthers
·:·.southern senior Jeremy D1ll the nght side of the field, w~ the took a hard bit, dro~ die ball,
sCored two touchdowns and ~t SHS defense bad uapped bim on then leCOVered.
ieven JIUICS for 110 yards Senior punuit' Pyles then cut back across
Both clulls fought to a scoreless
·Nick Adams had another" touch- tile scams and .back to the other third period. The Panthers, who .
down and rushed 15 tim&lt;s for 72 side of the field where be. rambled had marched the ball so successfulbefore beadina Into die beart or the Soulhern
ENTERING TliE STORM - Chesapeake
yards. Spanish exchange student 35 yards for the score. A run by ly up f!eld on the ground, th~w. • raqalna baek Jeremy BI'IIIICJenbilr&amp; (44) takes
defeDH durtni Friday niKlit's game at Racine,
l.Jnai Aldama-Eiorza added five Brandenburg was halted and. SHS two unwnely passes. Both were mwlaicb lbe Tornadoes won ~11.
·
the
llandolf
from
quarterback
Ryan
Crlimp
(U)
piiints wilb a field goal and two ex- slillled 7-6 at the 9:4Z marlt m the tercepled by Southern defenders;
11'1 mtlticks.
• · · second per!OO. .
.. .
. one ~Y Trent Cleland and the other
russell Singleton also llad a
As on Its fust possesSIOn, die " by N~ Adams. ' .
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great offensive and defensive · SHS ~ffense ~as ~repared. The
Sllll 17-6 cntcrang the ~mal
game rushing 1s times for 79 well-oiled machine p1cked apart the frame, Adams had a 19-yard antetyards ~ ~=kles. Se- CHS, defense, marc~ing. 76 Y.ards ~ption return haC~ 10 the 20-yard
·nillr qllllltlblclt · ·
Evans hit on eJghl plays, culminall,ng With a ~· Eyans w" bit bard from the
12: of 21 passes witb no lntertep- 22-yard TD score from Evans. to blind side.on a pass play .and· fumticins and two toUChdowns for !56 Dill. Aldama added the PAT kic\C ·bled, where Buddy Martin recovBy SCOTI WOLFE
Charlie Francis six~yard run capped Friday night With a tough schedaerial yards. Jamey Smith and and SHS led 14-6 at the 5:59 m~. . ered for the Panthers.
·· .
'J'Imes-Sentlllel Correspondent
off a tong scoring drive for Eastern. ule ahead of them, the Eagles will
Adams had lltackles each.
Talented receiver and special
On the second play from SCllfl!·
EAST MEIGS" - The Wirt Chad Savoy's pass on the PAT was really be rested.
· :··An estatic Gaul exclaimed, teams man, .Bnan Runyon ~egt mage, &lt;I~ Ryan Crump hit County Tigers, currently tied for incomplete, and Eastern cut the - "I can't be any more proud of
"This was a giant viciOry for us. Chesapeake m tbe h11n1 ~I nag 1 Matt Stollings thuty yards·out, then the top position in the West Vir- lead 10 11-6.
these guys. They played hard for
'Thil was a genuine ream effort all long. The fleet-footed senaor ram· · II!: wqn a 40-yard fOOl race 10. the ginia WVSSAC Class A poD, needEurem's offense showed much 48 minures against the ni!!Jiber. I
."dio way around. We knew what we bled 59 yards on the ensuing ltic~- end .zone. The 70-yard play was · ed 20 fomtb.m•an-• porn
' IS to fight poise in putting together a·gutsy team in Wr-st Virgini&amp;. 1 can't ,ask
·6alil0 do and we went out and did off and CHS had great fJCid pcm- ~ullified by a holding ~I ~~ the off an upsctM-~ hands of Dave drive.
.
·
for much more than that I told the
Ji ·This football team is evolving lion on d.e Southern 2t
line of scnmmage. Barber 10 the Barr's Easrem Eagles In front of a
. During the final 9:30 of the kids at halftime to ·not play to lose.
·c\!Uyday iJito a ve:ry good fOOiball
The Panthers got a hard-fought second frame, a 66-yard run by · capacity crowd at Eastern Friday game, the Tillers exploded with Just play to win," stated Barr afrer
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~rrstdown fll!" a fustand ~ silll8- Runyon w~s nulli~icd ,bY a clip. evening. Wirt,County claimed a help of ·the b1g play. The Tigers ·the game. H:e addc.d,"We are a
·. Southern n:cc1ved the openmg uon, but agaan Soutllen! s defense That play like Stollings run larer, very deceiving 31-12 win.
punched into 1hc end zone on a much better team now. The imitck and methodically drove it was t~ugh at crunclt li~e. Kyle resulted; In a Panther score on the
In the lint qaaru:r, botb.Eurem Cale five-yard run. Calc's PAT provement has been tremendous
liciwnfield 10 a scoae. Signal caller Wicklane and Jamey Smath made sam~ lkivc.
.
and'Win County established major kick was good. Minutes later, Josh throui!h the season."
't!Vians piWiayed the ball to Adams big plays In the stand, while Clc·
E1ght plays after bem~alled drives, but couldn't punch it into Colbit scored for the Tigers on a
Wot County was led in rushing
'and Sinjleton then opened up the land broke up • pass. Faced with bid, Chesapeake bit pay · 011 a the end zone. Witt County drove 25-yard TD run. Calc's kick was by Vincent with nine carries for
offense with mne short slants to fourth and nine, big Glenn Young Crump 10 SIOIIings on 1 nine-yard deep iniO Eastmt terriiOry, only to no good, and Win led 24-6.
102 yards. Easrem's leading rusher
• Dill and TI'CIIIIlll Oeland. Southern and Sam Shain spearbeaded an as- pass pl~y at the 6:3~ mark. The be held by the Jlaales great defenEasteril, looking to ~ut the lead, was Charlie Francis who rushed for
culminated the 11-play, 64-yardl&gt; sault that stopped tbc Panthers on two-pomt converuon pass to sive play, Darin Cale connected on was hampered by bad luck. With 41 yards.
.
· arivc on a 28-yard Evans to Dill the eight ·
Stollmgs was good to cut South- a 20-yard field goal for .the Tigers, . 1:00 remaining, the Eagles were
Savoy was 8 of 17 passing for
pass play 'at the 8:06 mark in the
That Sland with 1:26 left in the em's lead to 17·14.
and Win led 3..0. ,
well into Tiger rerritory when Cale
144 yards. No official receiving
·rust quarter. Unai ''Gus· Aldama half may well have been the pivOial
.Southern's decisive .blow came
The aumally robust Win Coon- picked off a Savoy pass, .returning
stats were available at press time,
booted the kick through the up- point in the game.
·
after~e kick~ff w.hcll" they took ty offense was sl)'lnied \hroughout 1t 88 yards fo~ the touchdown .
however, Pat Newland, Charle Bisrighlil and SHS led 7..0,
.
Sou!Jiem ~marched. 60 yards . over fiOIII !hear own Z6-~ard line, much of the fust period and con- Cale's. PAT kick was good, sealing
sell and Jeremy Buckley had sever· Chesapeake then found the, SHS downf1~ld, .m Its tw~ .mmute of- mBIChed 74 Y8f!IS and .h1t .the end tained very well throughout the the victory for WirL, .
.
. al big catches for EHS . Vincen"t
·:defense in disaray and qu1ckly f~nsc w1th JUSI one time outJe~L zone, '~\'ben ~1ck Adams burst game. Easttm's defense bu conThe fmal play of the game was . was 6 of 11 passing for 90 yards
·pounded out a running game be- Slllgleton had a lengthy run, wbile thropgh the hne from two yards tinued to improve throughout the npl tackin&amp; exc1tement. ~at New- for Win County.
hind top backs Shane Pyles and . Evans tossed a cou:k.~.·ncomplcte · out. The two-point c~nversion 10 , season and allowed them to play land lOOk Cale's kickoff 89 yards
Eastern (0-5) will host River
Jeremy Brandc:aburi. The Panthers pasacs to stop die c
set hiS of- Cass CJeland was mcompletc, "number one' caliber ball for most for an Eastern touchdown, The . Valley this Friday.
marched to the 17 and SHS was fense and work his receivers Dill Southern now leading 23-14 at the oftlie·game.
·
game ended with Win on 10p 31- Quarter tolals
aboul to bold oo four downs. Wbell and Cleland along tbC sidelines. A 1:39 mark.
In the second quarter, the defen- . 12.
Win County......... 3 0 8 20- 31
: •·'
Gaul said, ''We had to have this sive battle continUed. Eutern and
, r'lie scoreboard.didn't do justice · Easrem .................o o o 12- 12
drive. We wanted to nm some time Win both threatened, iS no one to Eastern's tremendous effort
off tbC clock and i£ ~ble put it could put more points on the score- against the Tigers. Wirt County
Statistics .
in the end zone. This drive was a board. Win beld its 3..0 lead at the broke the bi~ plays down the
nice reflection Of what these-youn~ "half.
stretch, allowmg them to escape Department·
E
we
men a made of. We had to have 11
In the tbinl quarter, €ale scored with their number I ranking in tact
First downs .................... 13
.13
and they came throu,h. Tile de- the fust of llis three 10ucbdowns,
The Tigers are currently lied Rushing yards .............. 239
74
fensedid a beck of a job aU night an 11-yard TD pus from quarter- with another team on Eastern's Passing yards .................90
144
tong."
baCk 1oe VincenL Calc's PAT ltick schedule, Matewan, for tbe top spot Total yards .................. .329
218
Costly ~d untimely penalties was gOod, anit Wiitled 11..0.
.in the stare. Eurem also fa9es the
8-17
.................. 6-11
could have proven fataliO Southern
Eastern continned their good 116- Number one team in Ohio Division Comp.-liiL
4
Interceptions
thrown
.......
0
as two Personal foUls and an ejec· · fensive play through the quatter. V football, the Newark Catholic Punting ....................4-28,5 4-30..8
tion gave the Pambers·30 free y.-ds The Eagles offense took over Green Wave. who were 28-7 win- Fumbles-lost ................ 3-2
' 4-1
and ~~ ~ a QB sneak by Crump where the defense left off, as a l)ers over Columbus St. Charles Penalties .....................7-70
7-44
"
with 4f Seconds left Brandenburg
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··
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Top• ranked Wilt County posts
31-12 road victory over Eastern
"

Browns' King fighting for spot
~~:!~:: ~~: :~ on offensive lin~ ~fter benching

ran in lhe extras and SHS led 23-

°

TAWNEY STUDIO

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;.: MAKING A GETAWAY -This unldflttlrted Southern baUcar;j ier (left) tries to •ake a aetaway from lbe IODI read1 o1 a Cbcsa:·~ake def~der (ceater) Clurtna. Friday night's game. at Raciae,
•;W,hleb tile TCII'MdoM WOII 23-ll.
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Trimble roars.to 34-6
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home win over Meigs
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The Browns have a bye week.
They will play again Oct. 11
against Pittsburgh.
·
King played lare in the Oenver
game when Fike came out with a
sprained ankle, but it Ulok him time
to warm ~~ ~e appeared to
have been
hr. Brian Sochia
on Eric Mctcalrs failed ~VO'SC.
"I guess what they want me 10
do is move people off the ball ~d
be the blocker Ed ~II$ can be;" he

RS
Department
· C
13
First OOwns .................:, .•1S
33-164
Yards Rushing .......48-271
yards Passing ................99 . 156
320
Total Yanls ..................370
C()rnp•..aa:.. ................ ~... 5·9 12-21
0
. Intecteplions thrown ....:..2
1-1
Fumbles-lost ...............0-5?
PuntinJ ............................0 3-41

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·: Me~gs after sttuggling at offense
fJrst four pmes shOwed signs
· .&lt;1/ getting iiungs totcther, three
times the Marauders had the ball
Wide the Tomcll 20-yard line but
IODy were only~ to find the end
Idle one time.
•
;. Meiaa received the opening
ldCJtoff and drove to tbe Tomcat
2l-yard line where a Eric Wagner
Jill WM pk:tcd off by Tom Hardy
.
rotumecl 30 yards to the Ma49-ylrd Une. Four plays lat!flnlly_
it in from two y~
left In the tint perk)d,
S1eve111 added the ~ck and
lOP 7-0. Tomcat
tv lticllants comtwO ~I:J:= .during the
bolb dl
Killle, One
1 yanll lllld lllodaer for 36

1"

EID OF SEASON SALE

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BrDAVEHARRIS
"ffmeJ.Se•tt.l Correspoodent
; · JACKSONVIU..E- The TrimIIIC Tomcats scored twenty points
ill: the liOCOIId half to break opeil a
close game and defeat tbe Meigs
l\1araudas 34-6 in Tri-VaUey Confe)'ence football action Friday

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PASSPORT
PHIHOD ,I.Do. s

BEREA, Ohio (AP) -With said...I need to work harder on my
1 ty f
lice but no reame to technique and push myself along
P
en about
practhis· week,
.
· ·eveland
.
. fas••r
worry
C
"' than I have been."
Browns' offensive g~ Ed Kinj!
King was angry before the DenReady_l•
wants to prove be 'Should 1!8ain be a ver game about being benched in
5 MINUTE$
starter.
.
the sec~d half of the Browns' preLast Sunday agaiilst Denver, the vious game, a victory over the Los
bora 1.
·
6-foot-4, 300-pounder ,from Angeles Raiders. · ·
·
~unyon had two catches for 61 • Aubum was replaced by Dan F~e. ·
Af!l:l being whistled for a hold- ·
424 SECOND AVE.
y~, Stollings 2·18 and Pyles 1· It was only the second start King ing call that nullified a touchdown
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
20
has missed since being drafted in pass 10 Shawn Collins tare in the L...-...;;..;=;;.;;...;,.;;;~..;.....;..._ _.
Southern's Sin,leton bad 18 the second round last year, afrec 'his
. quarter, ~g was rep~
taek1es , 1~cy Sm:~ I~ A~s junior season.
11, 0 1en" oDDg
an a sac •
King, said he found out a day
Wickline eight and Cleland eight.
ld
Southern will go west 10 face· before the ~ ·thai Fike wou
.--.... Hill ...,.
k
start in his p
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"""wee ·
'
' ''1 had started aU the drills durin~ the week, so I was kind of surQuarter totals
·
prised. It kind ofsluek with .me,' 1
chesapeake ...........o 6 ot6-. 22 King said. "It wu tough standing .
Southern........... ,....? 10 0 6 - 23 ·there on the sidelines. I kept thinking l could'be out there belping·tbe
ream. But there was nothing I could
Statistics

ball three straight times 10 nm out
the clock. .
Ciclancl.was 3-32 receiving, in
addition to Dill's 110 yards.
Pyles or CHS led all arUshcrs
with ~0 carries for 157 yards,
had 58 yards and Branden-

·•.

Penalncs ...................,.8*90

•

6-60

'

-

' ..

..

'

\

I

;

·."

2-HokoWeed Eaters ..................:SI79.l9
I-Green Machine Trimmer ........... $287.94
1-5 hp Lazy Boy Tille[ ................. $298.1 9
1-Snapper 20"lawn Mower ........ $249.95
1-D)tnamark 22" Lawn Mower.....$163.88
1-Dynamark 22" Lawn ~ower ..... $214.49
High Wheel
·1-Leaf Eater................:.................. $92.88
1-Thermos Gas Grill .....................$179.99
1-Hokp Uttle H08 ....................... S188.60 ·
1-Simplidty 21" Mulcher ............. S16U5
2..:.Ys hp Garage Door Opener ..:.,...$119.88
'1-Yz hp Garage Door Opanar ........$139.8~

CENTUl

SUPPLY 'C:o.

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.

BREAKING AWAY - Gallia Aaidemy ·run·
nine baddamie ·Caldwell (Ia white) breaks
away from River Valley defenders Gary Truance (far left), Brl!d Belville (88) •!!d. two
unidentiraed Raiders (f:!nler) and beads mto the

S«&lt;ndary's .COYerlile area, -.bete ..,ety .ur..
McCarty (ll) Ill waitba1, dlll'inl Frlda7 illallt's
grldlroli contat Mar Cbesblre. Tile Bl~ Bevill,
who led by li wide
early,
011 to win
38-8. (Times-S,atiael photo by KeviD ..m-)
.

••fila

·.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Seatinel Staff
CHESHiRE - Gallia Academy, fmding the offensive bite miSsing in the pr.cvious week's encounter with Portsmouth, scored
early and lare en route to a 38-8 lri-

· Statistics
Department
GA
RV
TOial plays......................47
47
First downs ..................... 12
9
TOial yards ...................227
211
Rushing att·yards ...38-183 32-118
Passing yards ..................44
93
. Comp.-au......................2-6 7-13
tnrerceptions thrown ........0
0
Fumbles-lost ................. l-1
2-2
Punt retums-y81'ds .......6-65
1..0

~Ji:A·;;;n;;;-~:r~::2~9~ ~~~

Penalties-yards .......... I0-75

6-80

•

' Individual leaders
· Gallla Academy Blue Devils
Rushing -Stansberry 7-60, I

umpli over River Valley during Se- punt returns ....:;. in the frrst eight
nior Night Friday night
minures of a contest billed as the
"We had a breakdown on spe- "Gallia County Super Bowl."
cial reams," said Raider boss Jack
The Blue Devils (2-3), who endJames, who witnessed Breni Saun- ed a three-game losing skid by
ders' Blue Devils reel off three scoring in double fJglll'CS in the first
rouc:~oo~ - two on ltickoff and quarter for the. rust time this year
before &amp;PJX'Oximately S.OOO people,
got on the boani right away. ~ior
wingback Bryan lfall, who earned
his gridiron stripes on that same
field as a Kyger Creek li&amp;bt end be29;
fore ttansfenlng to OAJfS in 1991,
Nurth 3-9; Donnally 2-5; Clay 1-(: toolc Dave Dobbins' ltickoff at the
2)
Academy's 13-yard Une, darted up
Passing - Donnally 1-1, 23 the middle aDd broke into the clear
yds., I TD; C. Barnes 1-6, 2l yds. . past what seemed to be a surprised
Receiving- North 1-23, I TD; Raider tickoff squad on his way to
StanSberry 1-21
the end zone. Tim Slone's extraFumble recoveries - North . point lticl&lt;: put the Fnmch City bat(I);Davis (1)
tslion ahead 7..0 with only lS secOnds elapscil.
.I
·
"Bryian HaU played ~bably his
.
'River VaHey Raiders
best high .school game, said Saun· Rushing-'- Cook 7-50, Hsialop ders of bis veteran, who at
6-24; McCarty 8-13; Peck 3-11; linebaCker teamed with co-captain
Dobbins S-9; Mike Campbell 2-8; and fellow senior Chuck North in
Penwelll -3
.
making life - or at least two and
· Passing - McCarty 6-12, 81 one-half hours of it - for Raider
yds., I TD; Covey 1-2, 12 yds.
quar1«back Aaron McCarty a hurReceiving - Canady 3-47; ried affair.
Dobbins 2-9; Penwell 1-33, I TD;
Throughout the CQnleSt, those
Peck 1-4
'
two and linemen such as tackles
Fumble recoveries - Mike Bob Mabry, Dylan Evans and
Campbell (I)
Roger Warren were among the
many GAHS defenders that con'' '

Ohio· high school football results
Franklin""·

..

•'

....

Ceri-

Eaiml4, D•t .~Fl2

Elyrio 22, II. Kiqmllo 17

~ W.. 42, AYm 0
llri• {Pl.) ...... 17,labwood St. l!dwanl H

Eudid.41, MapieHtl. 0

fobb&lt;ab 12, l&gt;locloonicbwJ 7
F...,_ ll,Xu!O
Fcol«ia 39. Bodfonl, Mich. 6
r-... Roa3t,Findlay7

.

"""- 31, W. Goo... 0

KontR-TI.~-6

Xioat 28, E. Clin... 7
Lob Cub. 56,,Cbanlan NJ).C!. 7
Lot.......t 3, O.,ll.;p. 0
1 , , - 30. a.. BaA I
......_4l ,lloy. Cmull21
"20,1W1loncl,P

I.AioiDm 42, IDdWa Lob"26
1 UinaU!' 20, LoadGDYiUa 15
Libony c.- 28, l'luid&lt;liomy 14
Libony llaim42, """ Albmy 0

Libort,--19,Loipoic 14
U&lt;tin&amp;lllo.52,1'Waj;llh.22 •

'

(TVC only)
Belpre .....................4 0
Nelsonville.. York ...3 0
Trimble ..................3 I
Vinton COunty ...... .2 I
Wellston .................2 I
Federal Hocking .... 1 3
Meigs .....................! 3
Alcunder ..............0 3
.Miller .....................0 4

··
PF
165
125
124
102
102
22
22
SO

PA
7
40
76
77
75
121
125
165

19 119

105
10 I
99
76
76
22
22
20
. ·~

24
.0
52
19
36
10 I
104
102
100

POP
tst 62 . •
135 52
I08 '38
100 88
87 123
72

- Meip quarterback
slips throu&amp;b a 11eam ID the Trimble defense tbat runs
back Jon Stevena (40) durln~lday night's game
which the bolit Tomcats won
• (Photo by Dorsal

80

86 87
77 148
22 122

Alhens ...................o s 53 178
( SEOAL Only)
Team
· W L
P OP

l.itlloMilmi~. -14
louioWlo 43, .C inolllaa 0
........... S"l,
~0

a..

.........W.Voll42,uuNWI

_,,J-11

--42,.....,14
Mm
54, n.uawu Vlll.. 1 .
.H p"''.W 26. Qe. Br «rti• 2A
M Jt!Wd ...._ 64. Orlliogohe 1'9
I

!ldn l4

-28.-16

-llhwV.U.:I4,-IIiablmdl8
- . , . . 21, Cmol fldr.aa NVI"o
- , . , . :13, St. CJaUmllo 0
24,Hallom .... 21
M=ri"=J-.. 36, Timba 7
Nulilloa ...., 21, ·14 ar

-16,-7

Molloaold :1!1.-o
.
M e - (W.Va.) .,...,. 16, Buck1}'11 Tnll
14
Yrd wb:=*40, WIII'Mll.ooll7
Mmtor4, Bedford 6
lillaml ,._ 31, O.y. I
lilidpuk 46, lilodloo :12
'
lilloirw44,0...13
.

M~pd•42.~ll

·

lilwiaoowilla20,eam. w.... ._.,.7
Mo
I' II, Mi&gt;bald 7
N. ofa..t3, c.r.- m.o.t 10 .

.

N. a.-d3l;W-lll

·

•

(W. VL) lilapolla 30, Ualca
: ''

New Philadelphia 23~CI'It 14

.

Marieua ................. t 4 ·ss 122

·

U....Sr.lt , Mlllaadl4

-¥illo

~om Hardy led Trimble with 15

(OveraU)
Team
•
W L
Portsmouth ............s o
Jackson ...................4 I
Coal Grove............3 I
WarrenLocal ........3 2
Point Pleasant .......3 3
Logan ....................2 3
Gallipolis...............2 3
RiverVaUey: .........l 4
MelD ....................1 4

X.....~49.~12

Na•
.._.lll

~

.

1992 grid standings

'J -

-.m.v.a )4.Millo&lt;O

.

game. The touchdown capped off a carries for 85 yards, Kittle added Quarter totals
nine play 53-yanl drive.
·
five for 76 yards. Richards hit on Meigs....................6 o o o- :
After the Trimble kickoff, four of six passes fo£100 yards and Tl'imble.................7 7 713-»
Meigs fwnbled two plays later with had one picked off. Craig pulled in
the Tomcats recovering at the two for 54 yards and .Kittle two for Statistics
Meigs 44-yanlline. Six plays larer 46 yards.
·
Jon Stevens scored from nine yards
In other action around the Tri- Department
l\il
•·c 'l'
oul, ~ extra points was no good Valley Conference Friday evening, First downs .................... l2
. lA
and Tnmble had a 34-6 advanUlge. ~Belpre slipped past Alexander 18- Plays ..............................47 . ~. as
Mike Cremeans led the ManWd,/ 8 Wellston defeated Federal Hock- Rushing att-yards32-143
Hen ~d attack with 94 yards !n i~g 30-0 and Nelsonville-York 172 . "
.
:···
19 carnes, and Wagner added 27 m rolled over Miller 34-0.
Passing yards .................73
11 carries. Wagner completed five
Trimble 4-1 on the year and 3-1 Total yards ...................216
of II through the air for 73 yards in the TVC will host Alexander Comp.-atl .................. 5-11
and two interc!!ptions. Aaron next Friday. 'Meigs, 1-4 overall and Interceptions thrown .......2
Dnilnmer puUed 111 two passes for 1-3 1n the 1VC wiD uavel to Stew- Fumbles-lost ................2-1
27 yards, Jim Pullins added one for art 10 take on Federal Hocking this Penatties ..................... 7'50
22 Yards, Matt Craddock one for 13' week
~!!!£.::::::: ................2-42
and Dar id Fetty one for 12. Tom
·
C ~emeans picked off a Tomcat

o s

llilllboro 28, WillilmlbuiJ 14
ilollanol Sprina. 37, ~ 6
U.t.llli Woyno42, FWbom &amp;
Hudoon 14, Tollma~ 7
Hllftll 17, Milan Ed:ii:(lll J2
lnJ1p1 denco51,Lutbena.W. ll
' lodiu v.u. 34, Sandy v.u. 7
....... 56.~W.Va . l4
IO&lt;boln32,V"mla1COIW)'6
·
Joluo Olcm 14, MfYJYille 0
J-..llortlwld.29,Cal.R"dyl3 ·
Alclor 26, I.otewoocll4

M=N:'Sr.26.CILB

Tomcats win ... __&lt;c_on_lin_u_ed_rro_m_c_-2_&gt;-~-:--------___;,.;.·;;.._·

Miller ;....................

a......~ooq o-. 29. Modinolliahlond 21. ar
a- a.y 33, (lovwport 1

Umall"odo26,U...Sho ..... u

'.-

' •l '

(All pmes)
Team
W L
NelsonviUe..York ...S 0
Belpre ....................5 0
Trimble ..................4 1
Vinton County .......3 2
Wellston ....... ;.........2 3
Federal Hocking .... I 4
Meigs .....................! 4
AleXander ..............0 S

llubtin 22, llillw.l21
H. Conlao 20, F . - 7
E. Kno1Zl,
I0

Led

tile Academy's 35. .
·:
From there, it took River Valley
(1-4) four plays to score, with McCarty's 33•yard pass play ac!llss
the middle to split end Josh P~O.­
well - it was the second catch'.i:lf
the season for the 5-foot-10, lSZpouUd junior, whose frrst catch qf
the season came last week agaii'Jst
Warren Local- being the captle't.
McCarty's two-point conversion
run, which came against a s~d­
out GAHS defense looldng f&lt;r l)il!t
to pass, cut the Academy's Jead".to
(See GAHS 011 C-4) · : '

TVC grid standings

• !)oy!MoWII 21, Smllbvillo 7

Gallcm 21. Buc)'Nil6
Oallipolia 38, Cbr.sbitc River Vall. 8
o..riOld ~~~o. T1 a.. Sculh u, ar
Ouliol4 QJ.. T.i.wy 21, O.mo17
Oonoa 44, !obmwood 12
Oiald21,Nlloo6
&lt;Jooi&gt;!'II2S, DoO!alfRivonidol4
Onbom .0, Miuni E. 7
Onnd V.U. 41, F,;,p.rt IJudini 12
O...Yillo2S, - I S

s~tly broke through the Raiders'
successful following 1/oth touchoffensive line to lreep McCarty on downs.
the nm 10 the wne.ilf, 13 yards oo
The second quarter went differ·eighl rushes. That's when they endy for Gallipolis. "We went flat;
didn't nail him or one of the run- and we lost our concentration, "
ning backs for no gain or losses. , said Saunders of his crew's play in
The visitors . had the Midas that frame, which saw three penaiIOuch when it came to the next two - ·ties on its fust offensive series '--. it
times they got the._ball, as demon- . started on the GAHS 16 and got
strared by tailback Jason Stansber- • down as far as the Devil~' 4..S..bery's 24-yard touchdown run (6: 15) fore two illegal procedure penalties
and quarterba"ck/safely Chad pushed the baD back to the Devils'
Barnes' 59-yard punt return (4:02) 35 - before a fumble in traffic
following the Raiders' second of- was recovered by Raider nose
fensive series. Slone's kicks were guard/linebacker Mike Campbell at

.

O.y. OUwood 26, OW.I3
Ddew&amp;R 23,
17
Ddpboo /df._. SS,IJl'l"" Scioco V.U. 8
Dolj&gt;llao SL /olm 'o 40, Mi11bur&gt; Lob 13

. 11""'"7,Wo4oworth6.
.

~

during Friday aigbt's batllt ror brlllglna riglit(
in Gallla County. Tbe Blue Deva1s won 38·8 tir
end a three·pme losing skid; (Times-Sentlaef.
' photo by Kevlu Pinson)
· : '•

·Gallia Academy downs River Valley 38-8 to halt losin·g ski(f

Nftrlhlur nd 17.
. r ... ll
llo....t43,MuA-13
Nowak C.th. ,ll, CoL SL 0wt.. 7
N - IS,IWlpdalo 6

.

·wt••

TURNING THE CORNEJl - River Valley
quarterback Aaron McCarty (far rlgbt) fi•ds
turnin11 tbe corner •l•inst Gallia Academy
defenders Roeer Warren. (55) and notber
unidentified Blue Devil not without resistance

In Gallia Coun'ty's 'Super Bowl,'

M.tyfloldl4,1!ual.Ue7•
w.ta.b 62, v..... o

17 COUR1·51REET ·.' GALUPOLIS, OH.
HRS.: Monday·Frlday 7:30·5:00 ·
Saturday.7:3G-1:00
446·2374 •"

10- ...tho IWO-flld,lllll by

&lt;'

•••

. Sunday nmee Sentinel Page C3

Pomeroy · •ddleport G!Upolle, Ott PolntPie8aant, wv

October 4,1912
r

:.0

.,

•

'

OCtober 4, 1182

~Southern hand"s Chesapeake
f~~-221oss

.

·.

Marietti ...............o o
t.oan ..................o o
oaltipotis ......:......o o
Jacksoll ................o .o
Warren ........... :....0 o
Alhens .................o, o

o
o
o
o
0
o

TOTALS

0

0

0

,

0 •'
0 .
0
0
0·

0
0

Od.l results
GaUipoliS 38 River VaUey 8
Coal Grove 41 Buffalo 6
Trimble 34 Meigs 6
Hurricane 34 PL Pleasant 12
Portsmouth 14 Asltllnd 13
PoruntoUth ND 34 Alltens 32 .
Jackson 32 Vlntoo County 6
Zanesville 2S Logan 19
~ 28 River Local16
Meadowbrook 40 W~~m~ Local 7 .
.
O!:t. 9 paes .
. Athens at ~lis .
WG!'Illt Local at Jackaon
Lopn at Mlricaa

PL l'IeuiDt at Poca
River VaUey .at Elilmt
Meigs Ill Fcdmi•Hocking
Ironton at Pot1$noutb ·
Coal Grove at Fairland .

7•

. WRAPAROUND TACKLE- Melp Muander Jim PuDina (ll~ ~
finds lll•sell tile vlctllll of 1.wraparoa•d tack!~ h7 a TrlabJ!t,:
defelider (left) dvllaa Friday nJabt'a Trl-Valle7 C011fereace III1IM ab ·
. Jacksonllle, wblcb tbe To111tatl won 34·6. (Photo .by Doraal;i . ,
. .
·
···:
Tbomaa)
. · · .

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'I

"

.\

.

-

J

�\ -

'

·'

nm•

At White Falcons! ho'!'ecorning game,

··

· ,

Yan uses prime-time·offense
to
hand Wahama 31-22loss
,
.

.

.

apart befcn ~ lWO more scor- series in just twil . pllys as Lynn
plays inside the lWO minute Black tossed a 27-yanl pass 10
Spartl Corftiii"Cieat
mark oftlle final canro.
·
Johnson 10 set up a 17-yard
Those
final
tWO
Bu!Jdog
scores·
IOOChdown IICIIIIper by King. Once
,'Jbird-nmkcd Van weathered I
th\Yarted
a
spirited
second
half
rally
&amp;pin
. Tommy Mayes booted the
~ second-half comeiJIJck
led
by
the
White
Falcons'
Travis
point
aflDr
PQt Walwna in front
eftart on the Pili of Coacli Don Johnson that saw the Bend Area • for the first Illtime
in the PI!IC at 22. "-Mea's Wahama White Falcons
team.
charge
baclc
from
an
·
tS-7
18
wilh
11:37
to
play:·
·
Friday evening after scoring i pair
deficit
into
a"22-18lead.
·
WHS
forced
a
Van
punt
on the
ol.IOUchdowns with less .than two
Despite
the
eight-point
margin
of
BuUdogs'
next
pcissesslon
and
the
. tihiutet remaining as the viSiting
defeat
.
·
one
might
say
Wllliama
lost
.
White
Falcons
lli-ove
from
its
own'
~!illdogs spoiled die White Falcons
~inll affiJJ'
.· with a 31-22 the SWA€ contest by a mattet of 37 to the' Van 10 with Blaclt ·ron- ·
...,...,weaterJi AthiCtic Conference inches. · On one play with 4:05 necling with Johnson, who made a
aiulnph. ..
.
.
remaining in the game, Van slOpped Spectacular catch, on a third-andthe
White .falcpns inches short of a nine situation to keep the drive
• Junior nmnins back 1botie Rowe
first
down on the Bulldog 10-yard alive. Ttle possession bogged down
ICole4 four touchdowns for the
line.
Van took over on·downs at its at the Van 10, however, whae •
~ County 11 and junior
own
10
and l)lde the passing urn of fourth-down play came up inches
~back Cameron Younce rid- ·
Younce
to cover the 90 yanls in shon giving the Blllldogs possesthe Wahllma secondary for 254
only
seven
plays for the winning sion 11f the pigskin for its pmey~
passing · and
three
touchdown.
·
· winning 90-yard scveq play series.
IOOChdoWJis as Van continued its
''We
were
only
ir.ches
away
from
Younce and Rowe connected on
t$Siery over the White Falcons
a
thrilling
victory."
said
a
dejected
a
43-yard
pass play to n:gllin the
wjth its thin! win ovet .the Bend
Ami II in as many years. The vic- Coach VanMeter following the lead for Van at the 1:48 mark With
ut'y kept the Bulldogs unbeaten homecoming · setback "We made Rowe again reaching.paydin with a
_ : run with 1:14 relllai~inpl ,
·S!Jing intact on the 1992 grid mistakes in the first half but carne ~3-ytlrdthe
back
in
the
second
half
and
made
ce
game.
1
season ·~ 5-0 while also knOcking
tit White Falcons from its pe~ things happen which put us in a .Van dominated the game's final
position to win this thing. It was .a statistics by piling up 401 yards in
atop the SWAC league standings.
real
heartbreaker to lose. We had it tolll1 offense.· Rowe collected 108
:Wahatna dropped its first conin
our
gnsp but let it slip away."
of the Bulldogs 147 rushing
feJence decision after two straight
Van
scored
the
game's
first
12
· addi ·
· •
wms and fell for the second time in · points in less than a one minute Yardsge 10
uon to ownmg .our
sii decisions overall on the ran time onlln midway through the pass receptions for . 11(i yards.
•r-·
Younce tossed three scoring passes
Clfnpaign.
•After a scoreless first period the second quarter. The Bulldogs tbow and completed 12 of 17 aerials for
hdge crowd in attendance was 73 yards in 10. plays with Younce 254 yards.
connecting with Herby Price on· a
Wahama picked iJp 223 yards in
~ to an exciting, actionpacked homecoming contest but in 25-yard pB play to put the visitors total offense with Carl King leading
IIi end it was the visiting team's on top !ly a 6-0 margin at the 7:15 the Falcons gnJ!IIId attack with 97
111lility to turn the big play into Juncture of the period. On the ensu· Yards in 24 carries. Rocky Stewart
JX!.i,nts on ll!e scorebOard that 10g kickoff Wahama fumbled the added 62 yards in 14 . auemt)ts
ball away to Van at the FalC!JII 44- while Lynn Black IW'Jied in • fine
proved to be the difference.
•Van struck with the suddenness yard line and following · a 10-yard second-half showing after coming
&lt;If.:&amp; cObra after its prey to score penalty assessed over the Bulldogs' on to replace an injured Ton;~l
tiel
quick
second-qum Younce once again took to the air Mayes in the SI'.IDid half. B
tOdchdowns less than a minute by hitting Rowe on a 53-yard scor- compleredlhree of eight passes for
ing toss with 6:19 left in the half to · 63 yards with Johnson owning two
make it 12-0.
catches for 57 yardS lind King one
Wllhatna closed to within five in- reception for six yards.
,'. .
.
•,;. ; (Continued from C-3) ·
side of lWO minutes remaining in
The White Falcons will now ta1ce
:iJ:8 with 2:25 left in ihe 5econd the first half when Randy Purkey a week off with an open daie on the
put a big hit ·On a Bulldog punt fall scl\edule before returning to ac4~·
:~'~ith four .seconds left ·befo~e
retumer CII!Sing a- fumble which lion against SWAC foe Buffalo
liilftime, Slone's only mJSS· of the was rero~ by Kevin Barker at Putnam in two weeks.
JUiht Cllllle on a field goal attempt the Van 37 yard line.. Behind the
Although lile homecoming loss
~ SO yards out.. Senior wing- running of Rocky Stewan the
to Van dealt the Bend Area team a
...,. Charli~s Peck took the shon White Falcons covered the 37 yards severe setback · in~~ to the
and returned it W Yards before · in si"' plays with Stewan scoring .. playoff picture some vilu.ble
ackled as time elt(lired.
from tfve yards out at the . 1:50 rating 'points reni8in in .the Falcons'
r
Devils sot back m the scor- mark. Tommy Mayes' PAT boot final four upponents of the 1992 ..
ifli business in. the. thiid quarter closed the WHS deficit to 12-7 at grid season.
· l\'DeD Slone's kickoff was muffed the intermission break.
. : ' STATISTICS
Dobbins followirig an 11-y~
The visitors took the second half
.Waham• V•n
and recovered by North at &lt;kickoff and marched 76 yardS to
First Downs
10
18
Rilden' .21. Four plays WIS aU ~ydin with .a· 3~·yard pass .from
Yds Rushing 42-160
37-147
tU gueau needed to visit the . ounce to.Price beins the big play Yds Passing
63
254
JIP!mised land once again; with 10 the moe play series. . Rowe Total Yds
223
4Ql
Bpnes' five-yard run on second ~~~ed ~ final three yards off Passing
3-8
12-17
aii!J p!IJdni the 1ut play of the .._.e
to gtve the Bulldogs an 18-7 I
t,fibrown
0
~ Slone 'a exira-point kick was
lead with 7:15 remain;n• in third
Fnutrcmpl··lf -t
4~
· · --o
b ""''"""'
.·.c
2-2
g!IJid, 111(1 the Devils padded their quarter *'rion.
..,....
Penalti~ds
4:25
6-70
. f~ 10 28-8 with .10:15 left in the . The·next
15 minutes belonged to
Punts/Avg
341.0
3-35.3
frlmo.
.
Waharna as Tlavis Jobnson i~ted
Off Plays
53
57
liRe-and-out series by die a WHS comeback by blocking a
RMien dial fo1Jowed covered nine V:an ~unt and 5e:00ping up the loose Score by Quarteni:
yC111 ud ended with a collision by ptgskin and rac10g 18 yards for the
1 2 3 4 T
sOV.eral OAHS defenders with IOOChdown. Carl King ran for the
Wahatna
0 7 8 7 22
51!1\h0more punter Jason Jenkins two point . conversion to puU Van
0 12 6 13 31
w!lim he tried to recover the ball Wahama to within three at UI-1J
Sports briefs
fcillowinl! an off-target snap. The. with I :07 left il) the third stanza. · .
•
Auto racing
~ mjurc;d him badly enough
FoUowng t1lc ensuing kickoff
NAZARETH, Pa. (AP) _:
lli:lideline him with a leg mjury (or Waharna
linemm, Craig Wesver
lbl;leSI of the game. Gallipolis then stripped the ball from a Van runner Michael AndreUi won another pole
setting a traclc 1'CCOid at Pennsylva~
non:hed from the Raiders 42 to the .
With
Mike
VanMatre
coming
up
hOfta' 13 in If plays ...,. three of with the fumble recovery 81' the nia International' Raceway and
m~g the tense Indy-car charnpi- .
thOse plays resulted in penalties
Bulldog
44
as
thjrd
quarter
action
~nshtp
battle even tighter going
aOiDSt the Devils - before Slone carne to a conclusiOn. The Bend
bOOted a 30-yard field goal that put Area team covered the 44-yard ~; the Bosch Spark Plug Grand
~visitOrs ahead 31-8 with 4:52
le~ auct three.
·
•l'he Rlliders, who never got past
~GABS 30 in any of their five
IC\I)ond-half possess10111, got their
n"t·to-worst possession of the
n~ht .when they stopped their
...., on downs at the River ValloY. 11. On the serond play of the
ddve, Mcearty fumbled .in heavy
traffic after Mabry-! s- hit, and
~homore defensive back Seth ·
I
·~errered the ball on the

8)' Glr-1 Clark

~M~·~il:=w:·.=a=u~k~e~e-m==;::
. ~.~,~la=;li:=.v=re~in~'Po~A~roy~J:~·ld~~~:~;~t~"~'~a~"·~fT~e~;~~"~~~:::;=.~';~.i=~=t=o=r=y=o=v~·~~-~r~·~:m::~;:·;:::;'n~~~g·~cs::
OCtober 4, 1892

S1ntlnel

ina

.

.-.
'GABS wins ...

M~fwTtteaukeAeWM'n
. elledtededPra~
•. ·
'""'M
run Off,...__,_
...:.:.~h-

~eption.s

r

WITH A HOT
SPRINGS SPA
FROM BAUM

°"

.

BAUM ·LUMBER

,

St·orchoard

\I I. "Chl'dllll'

NEW .FALL MERCHANDISE

a..dlnd 8, . _ . . , '
T_... l,lleboil7

NowYooU.-3

TodaJlspma

~S.KmtuCioy

ODcaao at\lm *•I p.lll.
0...ll1y11. Allana, I p.m.
lndl•••poliu&amp;TompaBoy,J p.m.
Mlaai ot Bulfolo. I p.m.
.
N.,.o.tou. otDooroil,l p.m.

New York (Sudenoa 12-10) at
B...., (lludiMr4-IO),I:Ol p.m.
Baltimor'e ~ 6--5) at Clcorcbnd
(Em- ().I~ loll·p..m.
ilolllli1 (lku 5·71" Torano (Ouanon
Il-l), !p.ao.
.
Milwaakoo (Baa.~ 9·9) at Oakland
(Moan&gt; 16-I2),! p.m.
•
MiMclaLI (Mahcmel 3-4) at Km111
cnr_(Ooldau 6-tO),I:OS p.m.
Ttxas (D. Smith 0.2) at «;alifomia
(llownr ~~:,s.m.
· Chie~~JO
· 12-12) at Seattle
(R.J......... II-l4),IO:Olp.m.
.

N... lfnlloo!lol N.Y. leU, I p.m.
OPEN 11.\TB: CINCINNATI,
CU!VBIAND, Jlooolal. J'ia&amp;1ouoah.

•

.· M=;~iame

Jlol1u ..

•9 p.m.

In theNL ...
Eoo.... llhbloo
............W L Pd.

GB

65 .594
74 .5!8
11 .St3
17 13 .481
ooll .............71 89 .ol44
l'lliloWphi• .......19 91 .431

9
I!
II
24
26

au..r.·-""':........
'

swunu,

.506
.................79 81 .494
S..l'nni:Uoo ........71 89 . .ol44
Loo A!P-........ .63 97 .394
z;-clinc:hcd,divili.ca tide

·.

F-~·-·
.n.......

olevl'l
oit•et

.....

....,

....._

comoL

-No purchaH nec-ry to

8
16
!4

Natlopal League

BATIINII- Sboffiold, Sm'Dieao,
.3!0; V..slrko. ~ .32!; - ·
Cin±m'1i, ;D:; INt. Jlhiiadclpbia, .323:

F'l'IUJ'I IICOretl

Owf~!A,;

SondlowJL au..~~'•••III4Dft, Allloll, 97; Dialo.
94.
RBI - lhulo.a, PbilHolpbio, 1119;
Poadlelrlll, A\lug._ 104: M!:Orifr, Sln
· Di.o, 104; Boa41, Pinaburah. 102;
Sbel'!ieJd, Saa Dieao. 100; Baawell,

.((loodoa ~ I3), I :40 p.m.
.
(Cod« I-4) "Ciftcinnoti (Ayolo J.l), 2:1! !""· ·
P.Uadelphl• (Jti¥11117-4) at St. Low.

Sui,........

-94:

HIT I -

(Podup16-3),1:0l p.m.

bu1Jh,I2;1hll•, .... - . I t : Ali -••• Uu1o. 10; ....w&amp;i, Pl!il&amp;clolphia,_I; OftltiDaa, Lo1 Anpl01, I ;
Olio&lt;-

nos-._.,,, ..........
.....

1

Di,.... a••
....-....»:-.-.:rr:

••

'"'&gt;"-

OIESTER

.

.SUpplyCo..

Disc
. over the Scmngs.D ays
'

8.88

tO&amp;•aadt

.

STANLEY

4/1.00

:?'A~..ctnd

I "'dd' Me on Lnedc:idl
fupea.Jelteup .

r'

..

•

B -..............17 13 .!44
o-Jood ...............76 14 .47!

2
· 1

· II
NewYooll :.........:...76 14 •.m· 11.
Doaoil. ... ~ ..............7l IS o469
19
u..................:.....7t ., .ol44 . ·23

...

.

. Gl

~
~~~·
~~~illdlidf

5
I
II
23

23
32

I,

-I
I

' .

•

'

tied with 7.

HOME RUNS -

land, 64;

$

power s1eering &amp; brake s,

81 ,1,89 miles . . . . . . . .... .

5995

1991 CHEVY CORSICA LT .

1990 MERCURY TOPAt
48.~ m
iles, ,MOil\il( , reQired, AWIF M. iii, til wlllll, inltr·

"""1•ijiOr.
V6, "'""·
di_
rll$l"""
.....•••"'I
. .... . $6'695
b!~.

IW

17,621 11Mies, g~ay/guy. t aM~«. ~ PIWbob 11
:FM.~bf:· 4. ., poor

1111

.16- ... ....

1

$,819·5·

Juan OonzaloZ,

T...,, 42; McOwu., Oollind, 41; Add·
er, Deuoi1, 3S; Belle ; Cleveland, 34;
Cartct, Tomn.o, 33: Doer, Detroit, 32;
Tdtldon,D«mm. 32.
STO~!!:SES - Lofton, .CJe~o­

1987 MERCURY SABLE LS

i-4.925 ries, b!9/N1Ne, !l"'tf wm:~WS. tas. SIIS.!Wakes
1'""•1. Od, II, IMIFM t.IS!II11,

Mr. • • · va. 1..-. cb::k ........

, Milwaubo, S4; And«

4

$4995

1987 OLDS CUTLASS

Sugrerne. ~NC. ,i,/fijf. a11151, ill. AlllrFMQ5lll. r.. rt

.•.
a.u.IU.,.,,..OI,OI$4495
2 . ... .... ..

•·-~~

Slbll1119 !.

1on, BalUmore. :51; Polonia, Cdifomia,

!1: R. Hetndrnon. o.k.llnd, 48; R. Alo,. mar, Toranto, 47: Jtaift•, 0UcaF, 45.
1lalDmooo, Il-l, .783, 2.54; Iod&lt; Monio.
Toronto. 21·6, .771, 4.04; IIWI Ow1nan.
r..,..... 15-l •.7!0, 2.76; - · Milw...
k.eo, 16-6, .111. 3.62; Mcllo...U, Clriu1"· 20-9, .690, 3.13; Applor, Konou Cilr,
Il-l, .6!2, 2.46; K. B_..., Texu, 20-1 ,
.64!, !.29. .
·' S1'R.1KEQUI'S - R. Iohnoal, Sooalo.
233: Pucz, Now. York, 218; Clcmcnl,
BOIIon, 20~ Jon GuZman, Tc1111, 179;
LanJiton, C1Ufqmia, 174; McDowell,
0Uclao,l70; K. Bmwn. Tu.u, 1~.
SAVES-;- ~ck..,lel, Dotlond, !I;
Apilon, Minneaota. • ; Montaomory,
K&amp;nPI City, 39; Olson, Baltimore. 36;

\

BasebaU

.

(II - ) .:... Tewto-

.- """· S4. ....... 16-5, .762, 2.16; Oimno.
Allollo. 20-1, .714, 2.12: ....... Cllloop, 16-1, ,667, :tllt l.ol1mnik. AlloniO,
14-7, .frli!, l-45: c-. New Yorio, ll-7,
.~o; 2.81:

a. Mailduo, Chloop, 20-11,

.64!, 2.11; L Jlill,-. !6-90 .640,
2.61.
.
.
STRJ&amp;EQIITS - Smolll, Atl'ant•,
liS; Cme, New Yooll, 214; 0. 1\Udd...

'Qictp, 199; S. Pmuade&amp;. New Ycnk,

193; Dt1bU:, Plusbv.fJh, 117; lUjo,

Cin*"J&amp;
171:-.~~.1~.
SA
- lAo Smilh, Sl. Louil, 42;

·w~, Son Dlep. 3.1: Weaotoo'd. Moo·
trial. 36; p. Jone~, Hou11011. 35; Mitoh
WD#,tru, Pb~t!l., 21: O•rlton,
Cin:ri' reri 26;
GifttiarlaU. 25.

'.

S59'95
4 dOOr, I (IWIMir. AM/FM .... ...

$6495

B.OSTON RED SOX -

Named Bob

76.383 Illites, 5 Sf)ee!l. blue/blue ..rear deii'MI. inltm'lil·
ltnl wipers . air. AM/fill cassetlt, · $
clOc k . ~ tyltn&lt;lef, 1 owner, . ·~ .. .

6495

1988 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE

1985 NISSAN 300}!X

Schaaf• ~ .~iaunllemll

5 speed ·transmission, T-topa, 2+2

Natlo:1•1Laa•

loaded! New cor trlde

NEW YORK MBTS - Activated
Willio Randolpll, ~d bdanan; from
1M ll-doy dia\Ud 1iol.

blue finish ....... ... '..

$4.495

BukelbaU
Nolloullo,Hetboll.u-lolloa•
NBA- ADeed LO I W..,.ar con·
tact wilh u. dficiala .uon. .

1988 PRELUDE

~l:c"tl ~i·~·ring •... . $8995

NEW JBII.SBY NETS - Siancd
Dwa)'M Schi,;'l, c:adlr, to 'a one-year

1987 .PLYMOUTH

FootbaU

BUFFALO BIU.S - Watved ChriJ;

.

1981 HONDA ACCORD

Wallb• ..W. ,...,., ud lipeclldm '«)

.

lbo~N,;:tLBSJlAMS - S~ped

--

:t::·
....-·

tivtiOd
Tim Bdwonll,Roleued
-··
· -All·
the
piellco
Doma

-

s;paii_B.....,......,Iboclt·
.Hockey
. . .
1'1 _
_ .......

·

MONTREAL C.\~ADIENS .
Sipod PaUl DiP!-........
. to I -

,...._

WASIUNIITON CAPITALS Loaned Olaf K.ollia. aollteador, to

._

4 door, 5 speed, aJr condltlon.lng,

s1795
.

77,000 miles,
new car trade .• ·. • • • . . •

TmtaWoNoo1.1Wol...t.
NBW.1!1'1mAND PA'J'III()TS - A..

' TAMPA BAY BUCANEBRS . -

-~~~~s~~'.'~·: ............ 5 649 5
~~:, •.. .... .. .. .. .s6495

·

llol...,l ~... boll ~uo .

Red, air,. stereo, power windows,

1991 PLYMOUTH

HOUSTON ROCKETS ·- Sl1ned

0011~-

~.

5 speed, 4 'tylindar. 67,233 mlles, red/ red , relf
de1rost. pewer st~rlng &amp; brakes.

1989 TOYOTA CELICA .

1989 CHEVY CORSICA

4 door, ~lue, air conditioning, stereo
cassette, automatic
lransmls!!lon , . . , .•..•.

.

A.IIMf'ka• LMaue

D. JJaJIIao. ~~· 26; s..d~oe&lt;a.
CJii'!'F&gt;26;LW-.M" I,:Il.

................
PnOI!NO

OX '

Transal'l ions

Tom~, ccmt«.

S'roUIN BAIBS - o.u-, Mm·
,..,1, 71: DoShioldo, Moouool, 46:
R - CiacloaoU. 44; u.kfonl, S•
Louio, 42; ........ · 4Z; 0 . Smilh,
So. ....... 4:1; Hlul. Adoalo. 41; B1111..-,

.1988 CIVIC

Hcnto. Tc:nmo, 34; Faa, New Yark. 30;

Je1f R...tl, Oo!ducl, :!0. .

110MB RUNS -MoOI!If, SU. Dieao.
3!: Skoffioll, Sao
33: u....

.'

,,

"

'

Mll~ ............92 61 . .S'IS

W-Ill. o.Ookllod ............94 66 Jll
............19 71 ""
Cllleap.................H 74 .m
T........:...............76 14' .47!
Ctli.fCIIIIia......... " ....71 19 ·' "
~ Oly ...........71 19 .ol44

II CU. lA. Non-IMICIWc
non- 1
conductl... With c!JPII...naua.
(Ill~)
. .

with cndolllCdlc

L J'a,
-~~~,.r.............!t:..94 16 .511
. ~..........

e\Od.J.

N.,. Yorio, !7.
.
.
'I'RIPLI!S .:_ D. s-et., Allanu, ! 4;
FinliJ)', ·I;IOGIIton, 13; VaaSlyke, PLu.a·

Pin•baqh (Wakefield 7·1) at New
Yooll()l ........... 3-1~1:40p.n"
·
Saa IHeao (BroeaU 0.0) at Atlanta
(Oio¥1oo20-l), 2:10p.m.
Soa ~ ().2) " CiftcinUIIIl'llllt ..2). 2:1! p.m.
l'liiladl'
~a-.. !-2) d St.. Lcail
I
(Comilr 9'10),
·I Spm.
•Maolnol (OudMr 12-9) "O&gt;iolao
(0. -20-ll~:l:lO,...
L of-I0),1:3l
o - 1-.:io
(llom1o&lt;:b
p.m. •

GAS SERVICE

Bacrp, Crleland.,,lOl; Molitar, Milwau. kee, 194: Mock, Mionooola, Ill; Thomu,
OUctJO, 1114; Mattinal)', New Yodl:,ll3;
E. ~. Soallle, fit.
DOUBLES - E. M•rtincz, Saaulc,
46; Thomu. OlloaRD&gt;. 4!; l&gt;bttin&amp;ly, Now
Yoik, 40; YoUnt. Milwaukee. 4&amp;. Gri!fey,
~ttl~ 39; Vc$1n., ChiCISO, 37; Puckdt. Minnsota. 37.
TRJPLES - L. Johnaon, OUcaso. 12;
ilev&lt;luW&lt;, BolW..,., II; Anderson, Baltimorc. ·9;" Riine., Chil::ago, 9; Loflon,
Clev,daNJ, S; R. Al.cmar, Toroow. S; Sue

en....,

· ~ (8 ran'&amp;Jd 0.2) 11 CUca,o
~=~2:~p.m.
.
s..
(M.Mod«oo2-l)atAIIomo
(I.Q1nndl 4-7), 7:10p.m.
L01 A.aaolu (Candiotti 11 · 1:5) at

&amp; APELIAMCE

=·-l'blt,93.
Atlanta, 191;

V..si,U. l'laolloqb. l&gt;t; Shdlield, Son
~ 114; Onoo. Qdoqo, 114; Sand·
bmJ,
113; OriHonl, Moo...,!,
I~ l.ool:fDIII, S4. ....... 174.
DOUIILI!S - V..SI,U. .PiJubull)o,
44; Loaklonl, SL Leuio, 40; W. Clark,
Saa Pt ....... -40; Duncan. Philadclpbil.
4 0 ; - ........ 39; ...,_,AI·
laata, 39; Grace. Chioaao. 37: MillRy,

(Oii-9-9),2:1S..~

-

4

Hollin•, PIWI~a, 103:"VInSlyb,
Pi..boqb. 103; - . 1\lonuoal, 99;

They P~!! Saturday
Pllubw&amp;h ll
1-12) a1New Yooll

'=

Saa. Dioao:-317; BCIII.dl, Pitt1

. ~.313;P -.,AWoou,.~l2.
.
l\JNS - Boadl. Pluobwlh. JOB; D.

St l.ouU 2, PIDiodelplll.o I
Now Yooll6, Pi1u1Ju1ab 3
_ 6 , .............. 1

011Itr1

1988 BERETTA
Automatic;, 4 tylinder, ilir. AM/ FM casselle;

PITCIIINO (1&amp; .-....) - Muooino,

·Leaders

II
26

au...., 3, w-11'
Adool.l4;·s..Piolo !,lot .....
-s.n Fdnt:iaOo
7, s.. ...
D!!io
2. )ld "Clncimati
1 ·

.......
.P••1111
oArrtw
oWIM
•••
ot.Noe F.. oll.y

COLOI TV WITH REIIOTI

.!.'16

-

. All liEN'$&amp; UDIES
WEAIOHWE

Wll A PIIULOUI

.606

New York (Kaaieniecki 6·13) at
B...., (O,..HoaU4-9~ I:Olj&gt;.m.
Balti.-(Mclloilo!d 13-13) otO.. ..
lind (Noli' 17-10), I ;ll p.m.
·
Detroit (Tan••• 13wll) at Toronto
• (Koyll-13),1:!5p.m.
(l'nabt.y 2-2) ot Koniu
City (Ron-~. 2:3!
Mllw..... (Bidlod II· ) ll OUiond
(Willl().t•&gt;. 4:05p.m.
Tcua (1.. Brown '20-11) at Cali!omia
(Biylnon l-11),4:0! p.m.
Cbicaao (McDoftll :Z0.9) at Se~ttle
(J'Ww.l-)), 7:3! p.m.
.

f.ni.

w...... Dl'fllloll

o·A-..............97 63
~ ..............19 71
s..a...,..............ll 19

JEIIISAID
'MOUOI
. SAU.

Tod•y'o Dnalel

~·

•·Piliobu:JII ...........9!
Moo)-...............16
su:.ou~~ ...............12

timore.l07; Winfidd, Tml'lta, 101.
HITS - Puckett, Mina•ota, 206;

,

Ba~l'hall

SHOES,
SHIRTS,

..

They played Saturday

Ka.uctlya0arc,4p.m. ·
LA. Itllllldllll PaDc:iloo, ... p.m.
N.Y. Oimii\LA. bldln;. p.m.
Sellllo .. s...a..,. 4 p.m.
W...iDI',. a Pt.omil. 4 p.m.

r

Mack, Minnesota, .3J.4; Bac:raa. Clev•
lind, .310; 1\. Alonw,T-10..309.
RUNS - Phillips, Detroit, 114;
Thomu, Chicaso, 108; R.. Alomar,
Toronto, lOS; Puckett, Minn010ta, 1()3;
Raine~, Chicago. 1~ ' Knoblauch, Min·
DCIOC&amp;, 101; E. Martinez, St.alllc, 100.
RBI -Fielder, Dettoit, 124; Carter,
Tcwonto, 117: Thomu, Chiclso, 114; o .
Bell, ChiCIJIO· 112; Belle. Clevc11nd.lll;
1'uckoll. Minn-.o, IIll; lloYeluUJI, Bal-

I

California 6, Tt~u 3 .
M i l - 3, Ookland 2, ·IIIMinp

.

5

one owner •.. , . . • . • . . •

.343; P!Jckellt, MinnetOU, .326t Thmut,
Chiugo, .'323; Mcilitor, Milwaukee. .321 ;

s.0... 2.0U..I"O

.. • In the AL. ..

~-*
'7.98
.

I

Make If A tong Cool Summer#

Today'sllllates

'

------------~------------------~------~---·J· .

roiNT .

354 SECOND AVENUE
GAWPOUS..OHIO 45631

.

'®w. W!!l.. · ...
.
LOGAN MONUMENT CO •.

'i:if;;l)

Thomas Clothiers

'

..

Hurricane beats Point Pleasant

,.

915-3307

.

cP

p •o esstona
• I

.·SEE · US FOR HOME, FARM,
BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY

Ridenour's ·

cbase~

. urncane .W"ns .. ·.

•HEATING
•HOT WATER
•COOKING

f.M.Iem·

calc~

..... --1.

:tlbc

'JY

·

b,
rilliant
1ballow
AL East
pennant
fteld
b~ ~obin inYoun~
and center
a rare . alive
Th~in tltC
Brewers
got
all three of 3night
to11beat ihe Oakland Athlelies inJ. catch o.n pinch-hitter Willie Toronto hit three homers io beat
"n"~'6.
~
a catc.her 1 mterference call to silly those unlikely occuriutces
. Friday -them
innings.
The vic\01)'
left ship
W!lson's
liner with Lance-IIlanken- Detroit
and clinch
•2 irltwo
games behind
Toronto
Oti second.
the division
title. at least a titfor_
11
(Continued
. .riom C4)
) .
.
':"i~ Were
two.~
to play.
.
Elsewhere in the AL, it was .
Another Blue .Jars Victory or a
1somg to try to make Cleveland 8, Baltimore 5; New loss b)" Milwaukee m the next two
rushed ,14 times for 86 and 77 yardS second halt'. On their first possesToronto C!'fl\ it by winning," said Yor~ 6; Boston 3: Minnesota 5 days will make Toronto the fll'sl
respecllwly. Atwell also threw the sian of the ba1f Hurricane again
ttavel to Poca for their final road .Paul ·Mohtor. whose run-scoring Kansas City I; ·Seattle 2, Chi~~ AL East champi9fl to repeatsince
ball well, compledng 5 of 7 ~s put the ball in the end zone this
game of the season. ··
double off. Eckersley in the ninth 0; and Califomilt6, Texas 3. '
the 1980-Sl New York Yaritees.
for 94 yards and a pair of ·time via the air as Atwell wew to
tied it at~· ~We have to win two ·
Blue Jays 8, tiprs 7
Roberto Alomar and .Candy
STATISTICS
games an
ey have to I~ two.
Jack Morris (21-6) struggled to Maldonado hit two-run. bonlers irt ·
touchdownaJonalhan Petry caught Mike WiUiams for a 28-yard scor2 passes for 52 yards and a ing play. Ma1asheviCh apin added
Point Hurricane It's not very practical but it can ~e the majors' fli'St 21-game the first inning, and ffi"B"orders :··
touChdown, whi!e Mike Williams the extta point and it was 21-6 . in Rush Attempts
28
51
happen."
·
· '
wtnner, aUowing four earne4 runs connected in the second as Toronto"'
1
also caugbt a pau of passes for 38 favor of the Rcdskios
Yards''Rushing
!58
275
-The Blue Jays clinched at least a and nine hits in six innings, but
.
Yards· One of Williams'
. The Blacks
right back Pass Attempts
6
7 tie for tile division title when they
(See AL on C-6)
'
went for a score.
.
though, and scored a quick Pass Completions
2
5 beat. the Detroit Tigers 8·7 earlier
The teams ttaded punts to o.pen touchdo.wn.S••..,"gattheirown 39 Yards Passing
44
• ' 94
Fri!)ay night. The Brewers, wbo
.·
- .
the
tes bu th Red
"""''
Inte
·
o
knew the oiiiCOme at Toronto in the ·
~
, con . t, t e
skins put y8rd line, the Blacks needed only.
rcepUons
0 f_irst inning of the.ir game in Oak- ·
potnts·~n the board 0!1 their second three plays 10 .hit paydin.
Tot Offense
202
·369 1 d
.1. '
~sst.on. The sconng drive was Point lOst 3 yards on their first First Downs
7
20
an • overcame !he performance of
·
luSt .a Itt~ un.usual, but .effective. play, but Smith completed a 30- Penalties/Yds ·
5-50
11-.85 ~·s starter Rhi'?n p.!ing, who held
Rock of Ages is the only nationally
_, Hymcane s drive took JUSt over ·yard toSS to Jim Bameu that took 1'urnovel)l
2
1
em to two ts oor eight innings.
known brand of memorials. Al an
one mmute IIIICi covered 44 yardS, the ball to the Redskin yard line. Punts/avg Yds
5-36
3-32
allPa~
Listach began the winning Authorized Rock of Ages Dealer, we '
34
but there
t
h
Return Yards ".
39
72 r
,or the Brewers when he hit are proud. of our unmatched reputation
. · were · "':0 encroac ment From there it toclt Safford only one Sc
Q ·
an mfield sin~e to stan the II th. ·. lor service. You can trust Rock of Ages
pe.nalu.
.an dilleaal
carry
·
!0 put the ball t'nto. the end
ore by uarters:
ReI'tever Jim
1 es and·
Clllled
" procedure
~
i (4-2) then threw and their Authorized O.alers. 1 2
4
vto auo~
unng the our zone. The junior fuUb«k broke a
3
'lilt a pitchout with Darryl Hamilton at
·play driv~. One en~roachment ~ tac!de and at the line of scrimm~~ge Pt. Pl.
0 6 6 0 12 the plate, but Hamilton reached to
went agmnst .the Bt.g Blacks whtle and another five yardS down field to' . Hurricane
7 7 13 7 34
·
' &lt;' •
the. other was whistled on Hur- score his second touchdown of the Scoring:
.Ptece
of theofbaU
and, Jamie
along
H J th
. . g&lt;:t
witha tt,
a piece
catcher
ME;tG$ COUNTY
ncane. Jonathan Pe~ scored the n.ight: The e"'tta point pass fell inc• ona an Petry 3l yd pass from Quirk's glove, pulling Hamilton on
••
. DISPLAY YARD NEAR
touchdown fo~ Humcane, e~~tchmg omplete, though, but the Blacks Shane
AtweU
PA
(Billy fli'St with catcher's inleiference.
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
JAIES A. BUSH, Mgr.
a ~ 1-y'!trd scormg toss from Atwell. were within nine at 21-12.
MalaShevich kick)
Molitor then sacrificed and
PHONE lle2·2588
•I
B~ly Malashevich added the extta
· Unfonunately . for . the Big pp • Jason Safford 91 yd run PA Yount was walked intentionally, .
CRUNCH TIME COIIIetl lor Wabama ~nnlna
W V Thou h .,,_ had
.
. .}
·
potnt
Blacks,
that
would
be
all
the
scor(run
fail~)
loading
the
bases
before
Listach
back Carl King (rl.... t) Jllld a Van de•ea·d- du-.r.
· • ·a. . II - 1
IJ7 yards in 24 carries,
..'' ••
tbe visiting BuDdop upeet tilt White FakoDI 31·
The B!g Bl~ks put together their .ing they . Wl)uld do this evening. H • Chad. Shoffner 14 yd fumble scored the winning run on Greg
ing ~Y qbt's bomecomlag PJ!Ie at Muon,
, 22; (Times-Seatlnel photo by Gary Clark)
·
VINlON, OHIO
first sconng drive after an exchanl!ll Hurricane, on the other hand, return PA ~iUy Malashevic ldck) •
Vaughn's frelder's choice. Vaughn,
DISPLAY
YARD
of (IUnts gave them the.ball at their picked up a touchdoWn in the third H - Mike Will.iams 28 _yd pass from · who struck out with the go-ahead
.1"'"~~., . .
STAlE RT. 180
own 8 yard line. Jason Shinn and another in the founh quarter to Shane
AtweU · PA
(Hilly run on third with one out in the
JAMES A. BUSH, Mgr.
i1ij~ @!l!f'f® r.
picked up one on first down and set the final score.
Malashevich kick)
ninth, was safe at first when the .
PHONE 388 8603
then S~ord electrified th~ ,Point 1
"We ,knew it would be a tough PP • Jason Safford 34 yd run PA A's attempted to gel a double plily.
.,
By Rid Simpkins
.
crowd wtth a 9)-yard sconng ~n game for us." said Safford. "Hur- (pass failed)
Down 2-1 entering the ninth, the
•
Sports Correspondent
yards on only H carries. The Big for 275 yards on 51 attempts, or a
'
that closed the gap to 7-6. The Btg riCane was 0-5, but they felt that · (t~k
Valentyn 1 yd run PA Brewers milled to tie against Eck·
Blacks rushed fof only ISS yards as little more thali 5 yanls per cany.
B~ks went.for two after a penalty they should have bee~ 4-1. Add to . H •. Shane Atwell 12 yd run PA ersley when Hamilton led off the
. ·cane.of•
agamst Humcane put the ball at the that 1he fact that . thiS was thetr
inning with a single and stole secHURRICANE-The Hurricane a ~m. as the Redskin defensive Jeremy Taylor led the Hum
untt
was.
:50
dQminant
that
they
alfensive
effon
wilh
96
yards
on
19
one
and
a
half
yard
line.
The
conhpmecoming
game,
and
they
were
.
(Billy
Malashevich
kick)
'
·
ond
before Molitor doubled.
Redslcins used their decided , size .
lowed
·
~
lOt
only
34
()ffensive
plays
.
cam
.
·
es,
while
%:U811efback
Shane
version attempt was stopped just really psyched up. We looked like
INDIVIDUAL STATS
The A's threatened to win in the L
.
ad~antage to po.und ·away at the
all evenmg.
· .
. I
j
shon of the goal line, though and we were reaDy geUing a(ter them
RUSHING
. ninth, but yount made a game-savPomt Pfe.sant Btg Blacks on' their
!be R¢skin.s me&amp;nwhile, rushed Atwell and C · ~arley each .
(Se•HURRICANE on C-5) ,
way to a f.U1y one-sided 34-12 win
~ Blacks still trailed by a single ~none occasiilll, and then it, looked ·
Jason Safford g. 144'
in the Redslrins' 1992 homecoming
• potnl. . .
like we woulcl go flat. I don t know Jason Shinn 7-2; Brent Smith 6-10:
contest.
·
'
At !'us pomt, the Blacks seemed why. But, we have to regroup be· Ryail Roush 2-12; Garry Peck .2-1;
·"My worst personal fears about
to be 1 ~pired l!lld ready to take the cause ne"'t week we have Poca up · Roben Hall 1-o· William GiU 2-7
this game were realized," :lllid
garne.. mto thetr own hands. They there artd that won't be an easy HURR
• ·
..
7 held the, ,&amp;dskins on their next · task. We .can still have a great
. ICANE ·Jeremy. layt_or 1~­
PPHS Coach Steve Saffonl. "!'worpossi:ssion and after the Hurricane - · season, but we can't afford a~10ther 96, Shane .Atwell 14-86, Chris Far:
ried all weelc that we would not be
punt, the locals took over at their setback. We have to correct our ley 14-77 • AarQ.n Valenlyn 3-12.
able to move the ball against them
because of their size, and I also was
own 14 yard line. But, on second mistakes aild get better," concluded Stephen Lucas 1-4
;
.concerned that our defense would
dbwn, with the Blacks needing 9 · Safford.
PASSI~G
yards for a first down. Chad ShofMike Gardnerled the Big Blacks P&lt;?IJ:'I'f · ~rent Smtth 4-l·0-30yds;
...
not be able to stop their offense.
fner
stripped
the
ball
out
of
a
Point
.
with
3
solo
tackles
and
16
assists.
WtUtam
Gill2-1-0-14.
1989
NISSAN PULSAR
·Unfonulllltely, I was riglit on both
T-Tcps, _white 'fini sh, one owner, low
Pleasant
.running
back's
hands
and
Brian
Preece
also
had
3
solos
while
HURRICANE
·
Shane
Atwell
7-5counts," he added.
• LUMBER
94
miles,.,,. .
$6995
Hurrican~ moved the ball seemgalloped 14 yards into the end ~o~ picking lip 1,0 assists. Jason Shinn
RECEIVING
condlllonmg .... , .....
ingly at will against the defensive
. for a iouchdown. Malashevtch s had. 3 and 5, Saffonl 3 and 3, Shan·
0
unit of the Big Blacks, while the
~ick made it 14.,6,
oon TaylOr 2 and 7, Brent Smith 2 ~l~'l:l~irn Barnett 1-30; Mau
R~n defenders_shut down the
· · Thatis ·hoW the half eqded, but and~. and Jim Barnett I and 13.
HURRICANE • Jonathan Petry 2·
Pomt offense, except for two long
·the ,Redsldns wasted li~ time in
The Big Blacks are now 3-3 on 52; Mike Williams 2-38; Billy
.
'
runs by junior fullback Jason S!lf·
getbng on the scorebOard in the . ·til!: season and next week they Malashevich 14
ford.
·
•'
.Safford was, one of the few ·
bnght spots for the locals, scoring
985·3301
St. Rt. 241, c•ester
both Pomt touchdowns and earning
1988 OLOS
game-high rushi!Js.,honors wilh 144
Supreme,\ automatic, • air, stereo
American
Leagu';-Friday'• Kores,
BATTINO - E. Martinez, Se.ttle,
cassalte, cruise,
5599
rt ....

tid

..~ter a holding penalty pushed
~blue fon:~ back to the Raiders'
2Y, Mike Donnally, a 6-foot-1,
1~-podld junior sent in to relieve
B"nes at quarterback. tossed a
piCI over the middle and in heavy
irilf'JC to North, the fullback. North
twiated his way throuih the
ti.ipb.ckcn and into the clear to
c4Jnp1ete a 33-yard touchdowo
· play with 10:20 left in the
Slone's extta-point kick was
which made hini 5 for 5 in
kicks and 6 for 7 in
·
~eking in ·additljC'final
.
1 ll'eada~allia
begtn the SoutheastAthletic J..easuC portion
~c:bedule at home againsr
AJhell, w)lile River Valley will
to Tuppers Plains to take 011

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Tim• Sentinel

By JOHN NICHOLSON
four rclivm for a foul .Jtitter.
Assoc'-ted Press Writer
He stiUCt out Jeff Gardner 8lld
John Smoltz overcame a 60- Andy Benes in the third to pass
pitcb limit in his final tuneup Cone.
befor e the NL playoH opener
In the second game, Pete-Smith
against Pittsbursh Ul edge David won his seventh straight decisioo to
Cone for the league's sb;iteout complete the
with a 7-2 victitle.
tqry before a se lout crowd of
Smaltz, who !brew exactly 60 41,075 that pushed die Braves'.seapitches in fo\lf innings, struck out son tolalto l,Ol9,216.
three in the· Atlanta Braves' 4-1
Smith (7-0) pitched 6 1/3
victory .over lhe San Diego Padres ·innin~s, allowing seven hits with
ftl the rll'St game of Friday night's six suikeouts and .two waits. ·
doubleheader to raise his season . In the .opener, David Nicd (3-0)
total to 21S. Cone had 214 before picked up lhe victory with two perNew Yori: traded him .to Toronto.
feet innmgs of relief and David
''I'm happy to go out there for Justice hit a- two-~n homer, his
four innings and accomplish my · 2_0th of the season, m a three-run
thl'ee main goals - have a good SIXth.
·
tuneup, get the thiee suikeouts and I . . '?other games, New Yori: beat
have us win " said Smaltz who Pitrsburgh 6-3, Houston defeated
aUowed one hit and combined with~ Los Angeles 6-1. Chicago beat

: CINCIWf.:i KA(A~)
_T .
.
. ·
wo
~C;I ~ lhe Dave Shula era, ~e
mc;mnau Bengals were looktng

aood. •

Montreal 3·1, San· Fraucisco
defeated Cincinnati 4-1, and St.
Louis edpl Plriledelpllia 2-1.
Doclpn 1

. In Houllllll, Danyl Kile tied his
carc«·hi&amp;h witb II suikeouts 8lld
Steve Finley hul!lered; tripled and
had two sinpes.
Af1CI' allowing a run in the rllSI
innina. Kile (5·10) SIIIICk out Jose

Offerman to end the second ind
retirtd lhe next 11 in a ..,w .until be
walked Tom Oooilwin in the sixth. ·
Orel Hershiser (10-15) struck
out five and walked one over six
·
· innings.
. Houston took a 3·1 lead in the
third on Luis Gonzalez's two-run
double after Cllil Biggio doubled
and Finley sinBied.
·
Fmley hit his flflh homer of the
seasOn.lD the fifth to make it 4-1.
He drove in a run with 11 triple in
the seventh and stored on Gonza·
lez's sacfifice Oy. · · ·

CAUGHT IN RUNDOWN- Milwaukee's Robin Yount (with
1 bead dowu) finds himself mugbt by Oakland catcller Jamie Quirk
~. at the end of a rundowu between home and third lD ·the second
\· innlDg of Friday night's American League game ·ID Oakland, which
.• 1: tbe Brewers won J•l in 11 innings. (AP).
.
~· .
'
ccontinuedfromC-5)

· :.:Opened a 6-1 lead. But ,Detroit
:Closed to 8-7 in the seventh on
-Mickey TetUeton's home run.
· Indians 8, Orioles 5
: Carlos Baerga went 3 for 4 to
:-become the first AL second base' man ever tD hit .300 with 200 hilS,
:(2ohomers and 100 RBis.
~- Baerga now. has 201 hits and a
~'3 10 av~rage to go with his 20
~1lome runs and 105 RB!s, the most
,-by an AL second baseman since
•.Bobby Doerr had 120 in 1950.
: Baerga had two RBI singles in Fri·
: 'da_y, night's victory at Municipal
•:Stfulium.
,
.
:- Rod Nichols (4·3), who pitched
~:tour scoreless innings before a twof}'Un h\)IIICr by Cal Riplcen Jr. in the
· ~ ilinth inning, was the winner. Rip• ken finished with three hits and
~ fourRBls.

:·
TwlDs S, Royals 1
, · Chili Davis had two homers and
[four RBis and John Smiley pitched
four-hitter for Minnesota at
~1{ansas City.
.
~·. Smiley (16-9) retired the rust 13
•·batters before Mike Macfarlane
. :doubled. He w,as unscored on for
;27 .113 innings until Wally Joyner
•came home on Gregg Jefferies'
:double-play ground~r in the sev-

;a

~enth.

. •·
•

Yankees 6, Red Sox 3
l• Bob Wickman continued a
~ strong. rookie year for New York

with :his sixth victory in seven
starts as the Yankees won at
Boston.
Wickman (6-1), off to the best
stilt of any rookie Yankees starlet
since Tom M!l!l!an went 7-1 in his
first eight decis1ons as a staner in
19Si, allowed one run and five hits
in six innings.
.
The Yatl)r;ees built a 6-0 lead,
starting .with Mel Hall's 1Sth
homer of the season.
Angel1 6, Rangers 3
Reggie Williams, playing in his
13th major league game. went4 for
4 and scored three runs for California against Texas.
.
Mark La'hgston (13-14) pitched
a six-hitter for the Angels.
·
The lef!·llanck;r SII'UCk out a ~­
son-high 13 and wlllked one.
Marine!'$ 2, White Sox 0 .
Rookie Dave ·Fleming .set a· .
Seattle record :with his .fourth ·
shutout of the season as the
Mariners won at home against
Chicago.
Fleming (17-10) pitched an
eight-hitter to notch his seventh
complete g811le of the season. He
walked two 8lld struck out three.
Charlie Hough .(7-12) lost,
yielding two runs, only one eameil,
on five hits in seven innings.
Jay J3ubner doubled twi~e and
scored both 'of Seattle's runs on
sacrifice Oies by Dann Howitt.

and rookie Jeff Kent had two doubles and two singles in four at-bats.
Schourek (6-8) struck out five
and walked two. Barry·Jones fin·
islied for his first save. Doug
Drabek (IS-11) allowed three runs
od seven hits in five innings.
New York broke a l-all tie in
the fouith oo Kevin Bass' RBI sin·
gle 8lld Billfecota's RBI fielder's
choice and Kent nlade it 4-1 in the
sixth with an RBI double. Pittsburgh's: Barry Bonds -hit his 33rd
homer in lhe seventh and Jeff King
added his 14th in the eighth.
·
Cubs 3, Expos .1

l

,

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Washington, a solid second to
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..
The Flyers will battle with the
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· The Devils changed coaches dumping 'Tom McVie in fa~or of
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His knee injuries. beginning
early in the 1989 season, limited
Woods 19 playing in only 26 of
Cincinnati's next 48 games.
In case he cannot land an NFL
job, Woods said he is starting a
business as a distributor of borne.
car and personal security systems.
Woods said he needs lhe income as
a father of four.
.
"It's ~ !told everybody ~
the Bengals cut me: There's always
life after football. This is not ~~Ding
to stop me from living,'' he S81d.
He still follows the progress of
his former· Bengals teammates and
watches the televised games. He
empathized with Bengals quarterbact Boomer Esiason. who has
fallen into a passing slump as the
team has lost its last two games to
compile a 2-2 record this season~
"My personal feeling iS Boomer
is just not playing well," said
Woods, in respoose to critics who
suggest that Esiason 's best playing
days are behind .him. •'Everybody
can see that. Once he gets back on
track, they'll be aU right."
The Bengals have a bye this
weekend. They play at home Oct.
11 against.the Houstoo Oilers. .

SPECTACUL.AR
HUNTING

· .

ters. .

RECYCLE YiRD WASTE
INTO FREE MULCHI

Woods, still in Cincinnati,
believes in his.football future

CINCINNATI (AP)- Fonner
Cincinnati Bengals running bact
lckey Woods is still on the sidelines after lhe team gave up on him
and his two injured knees.
The Bengals waived Woods, 26,
on May 13 after two major knee
-injuries 8lld four NFL seasons. His
biggest year was his 1988 rookie
season when he rushed for IS
touchdowns and I ,066 yards in the
regular season as the Bengals
advanced to the Super Bowl. That
year, he attracted media and fan
attention for a post-touchdown
dance that became known as the
"Farve." .
"Ictey shufDe."
Farve doesn ' t.quite get his
Both his knees have been surgi·
revenge. But it •s close.
cally repaired. No NFL teains have
FALCONS, 24-20
· shown enoupt interest to sign him.
Seattle (plus3)
But Woods ts still hopeful.
at San bleJIO
"I love playing the game. I'm
Tbe f'~rst of a a "who cares?" not ready to give it up just yet," be
doubleheader.
~aid Thursday from his hOme in
CHARGERS,14-10
suburban Evendale. "Now I'm just
.·
New Englruld
a SflllCtaiOr, !ICCing things from the
(mlnus81/l)atN.Y.Jets.
sideline. I hate being on the side.. ''
•
Who Cares IT.
1IDCS.
Jets, 22-3
The former Nevada-Las Vegas
S!JU' said he is still wori:ing OUL He
Last week: '7·4 (spread) 8-3 reCently switched agents in hopes
(straiglit up)
or attracting some NFL ID~L
Season: 28-23-1 (spread) 39-13 .
(straight up)

.

.backup with limited - ex~penee,
and rust-round draft. choil:e David
Klingler isn't ready to taii:c a SIIIIP·
Esiasoo is the only one with a lot of
experience in Cincinnali's no-buddie offense.
There is a lot of fan pressure on
Esiason, who was booed llld taunt·
ed at Riverfront Sradiurn last Sunday before hiS third-quarter bencb·
in~. It's going to get wme unless •
ESiaSOII gets much better.
!'You're the q~ Qf the
team and you're 1n the limelight,
yo~·re goi~g to be the focal pc_&gt;int,' ' .
Es18SOn S81d.-"l can'.t say 11'~ not
disheartening because it is."
·
'--:~-..

his

rJtJv:o.·$14,888

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Air. tilt. cruiM, AMIFM - ..
IUXIIIery 11th11nt.

at Tampa Bay
Jeff George may 1)!1 back.
But oh, those orange pants.
BUCS, 24-13'
, N.Y. Giants (pick •em)
at L.A. Raiders
AI Davis•s gays are one game
under .SOO sinCe 1986. Ray Handley's guys are one game under .SOO
since 1991.
GIANTS, 27-20
. L.A. R111111 (plus 15) ·
. at San Frandaco
The Rams have had their month
against the AFC EasL .
49ERS, 34-17
WashiDgton (miaus 10)
at Phiii!Dix ,
The Redsldns are 0-1 against the
spread on tJH: road this y~ when
they wear then' b\lfgundy sh1tts.
REDSKINS, 22-17
Green Bay (plus 7)
at Atlanta
. Maybe J~rry Glanville traded
Brett Favre because he couldn't
figure out why it's pronounced

.

had the .last laugh a8 the Penguins
eliminated the Rangers in the division rma1 oo the way to the Cup.
The Rangers are still the team to
beat this season. Besides Messier,
the Hart Trophy winner. they have
defenseman
Brian Leetch, who
i : PatriCk Divisiou teams posted a
lOOk
the
Norris
Trophy, the goal·
':.594 winning_pereentage against
tending
duo
of
John
Vanbiesbrouck
, ·lhc'NHL's 16 other teams last seaand
Mike
Richter.
good depth _at
' =tOn - the best since the current
forward
and
excellent
special
~41tvisional alignment was ·introteams.
·
.
-duced a decade ago. With Lindros,
they
haven't
found
is.·a
Wl!at
·'!"idely regarded as hockey's next
way
to
beat
Pittsburgh
when
it
mat'SQperstar, now with the Philadel·llhia Flyers. that figure could climb ters most The Penguins rallied past
Washinglon and the Rangm before
'iiiis·season.
•: .But desjlite the addition of Lin- sweeping Boston 8lld Chicago for
'dios, the Flyers will have a hard their second Cup.
Lemieux, Jaromir Jagr and
:time ending their three-year
Kevin
Stevens 'are the most lethal
iibsence limn the playoffs - partly
line
in
hockey; Tom Banasso is a
'lltic811SC Lindros will have to wori:
money
,goaltender and there are
·JWd just to be the third-best center ·
suP.pon
troops. though role
good
·iir lhe division.
players
lite
Bryan
Trottier, Gordie
-i~ On top, there'll:tPittsburgh's
Roberts
and
Phil
Bourque
have left
Mario LemillUX,the · ing super·
with
Bourque
going
to the
:ttar in the game tod and the·
Ransers
as
a
free
agent.
.
..l'!IVP of the Penguins' ·second
·
The
biggest
question
is
who
will
·~ght Stanley Cup. triumph .
.,· Then there.'s the New York coach them. Scouy Bowman
'limgen' Mart Messier, the MVP doesn't want to come back - at
ddriii11the regular season. One step least not for what OM Craig
l)elow that is the New York Patrick is offering - so Patrick
·Islanders' Piem: Turgeon, who at may wind up going back behind the
l3 appears to have regained the bench.
!Pfm that made him the No. 1 over.U pi~k five years ago;
•r Messier ·an&lt;l the Rangers won
ihe first battle last seaSon, winning
~ division 8lld finishing No. 1 in
~ overall standings. But Lemieux ·

.......0111 !

.

Sunday nmH &amp;tntlnel Page C7

winl .

, INIUIAN&lt;~.

.

.

'l' •

Vikings have~ moved
.· the ))all easily ·can say,': comerbatk ,Rod Jones
·the lut three weeks. Cincinnati's said. "We've gOt to gellt fixed"
new 111act defense has left i~ corThe Bengals are deep at safe!)'
nerbacks Cllposed, 8lld teamS have but weak at cornerback - Enc
talterudV~Dt~&amp;C··
Thomas is slowed by a Jmee brace,
_ Jay ~ threw for 380 8lld Jones has had problems coveryards in the' second pme, hitting ing. It~·~ get any easier - the .
bi$ nlay afllt bi$ play in the Ben- Bengals face Houston' s run-andgatl24-21 overtrme
shoot next Sunday.
- Brett Favre led 111e Packers
It doesn't get any easier for Esi·
92 yards with no time ouiS in the. ason. either. The Oil~ are one of
rma1 minute for a 24•23 victory a· the teams that have g1ven h1m uouwcdt later;
ble over his career.
. .
- Ricll Gannoo playing with a
This year, every derense 1s g~vchipped bone in
j!assing hand. ing Esi!'5aJ ~!ems. He'~ thrown
threw a career-high four touch- . seven mtercept1ons and JUSt two
dOwns lasi Sunday ·
touchdowns. hasn't completed a
It loots lite 'the same p_ass pass of more than 27 ~ards, and is
defense that gave up lhe most y.-ds the 26th-ranked passer m the NFL.
of any team last year. The Bengals'
H,e's' missing 9J!CIIing receivers•
pressure is paying off in more ~ating poor cho~ and sounding
sacks - 20 after four games, just ~~- a quarterback m a confidence
one shy of their total for last year. c~~.
But if they don't get· the quarterNobody feels worse than I
bact, they get burned.
do, .. he said.
The Bengals have missed
Esiii;!OO says he:s not hun._ That
assignments i!l their zone defem;ll leaves JUS! one othe.; explanation: a
and failed to keep up with receivers bad slump.
,
'.
in man-to-man coverage.
The Bengal~ don t have ~.any
"There's really not 100 much I options there. Don Hallas 1s a

Lindros, Flyers face mountainous
task ofuns.eating Lemieux, Penguins

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to switch Wakefield to Game 3
because his knuckleball might be
difficult io catch during a day
fa~e. Game 2 Will be played in the
aftetnoon.
·
•'

By JOHN KREISER
, . , AP Sports Writer
The Patrick spent last season
.~ling up on the other three divi.',sions - and that was pre-Eric Lin-

Features~

r

·VI NT
. ON ·UCEWIJ
SPECIAL .·

~ver 1~-g&amp;II!C winner R.andy tomhn m!lmly because of Jackson's
postseason experience. Jacbon has
pitched in two World Series, in
198S with Kanaas City and 1990
with Cine~ and has a 2-1 post·
season recud..
·
"It will be ·a popular decision
with 10111e, an unpopular one with
othen," Leyland said. "It was a
touch choice, but somebody has to
start and somebody has to be in the
bullpen.... l..oQk at Atlanta, they're
·not aoing to stan Charlie Leibrandt
- he just pitched a couple of
shutouts -and Pete Smith who
hasn't kist."
'
Leyland said hitting cqach Milt
May, a former calliher, qrged him

•••

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Benavldet I• the nfth Inning of Friday night's'
. National Leape game lD CIDclnnati, which the '·
Giants won. 4-1. (AP)..
•

· -•.

HIGH EFFICIENCY
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By DAVE GOLDBERG
Maybe because the-Bills are averAP Football Writer
aging 38 points a ~arne and the
·, They've had two weeks to hype Dolphins sb'Uggled m Seattle last
, 4( in Philadelphia and Dallas. two · week.
· ~weeks IQ make i\ Ibis year's Game
Also, the Bills play defense this
;pc Century, Not to rnentioo the year ... at least apmst bad ·teams. .
f\lll'llbe~ of times AI, ~rank lll'ld Dan They gave up 31m a shoutout with
~ 11 on LAST MQnday night'~ th~ 49':i's, jus_
t 14 meani_ngless
giune.
.
·
pomts m three games w1th the
Too bad it's only one of two Rams, Patriois and ColiS.
Games of the Century THIS
And thinlly, it's lil&lt;:ely about the
WEEK, Miami and Buffl!lo being only thing Keith Jackson will be
the other.
.
able to do for the Dolphins this
, The Eagles looked awesome in wcdt is yell "Fummbblle ..."
their last game, the 30-0 clobbering
If there is one.
of Denver in which they held the
BILLS, 31-17
Broncos to 82 yards. 'lbe Cowboys
Kansas City (plus 1)
didn't, sleepwalking through
at Denver
Phoenix at borne.
Not since 1982 have the Chiefs
. Dallas woo this one last year on be8ten the Broncos at Mile High
Kelvin Martin's 8S-yard punt . Stadium. That includes seasons
return that effectively put the Cow- when the Broncos were bad and the ·
)l9ys in the playoffs and the Eagles Chiefs gOOd 8lld vice versa.
: ouL
The jinx ends here against the
That was against a Philadeiihia Broncos, whose offense is so rid: team without Randall Cunnin
died that even John Elway can't
. and Herschel Walker but ITH save them.
CHIEFS, 20-9
I
..Keith Jackson, who went south to
~ Miami. Despite Jackson's loss. tl!e
CblcaRO (plus 4
;~!adelphia offense is finaUy bal·
at Mmnesota
1
•anced, thanks to Walker and
These are not the old Bear.i ~receivers Calvm Williams and Fred to win they have to outscore the
. ,Barnett.
other 11uys. Not on what Mike
} The Dallas defense? That '.s why Ditka likes to call a roller rink, the
'lhe Eagles are 4 1/2-point favorites Metrodome.
:..... not aU of it for the home field.
VIKINGS. 31-20
' But it's still OIJIY the fourth
New Orleans (plus 1)
"
game of the sCIISOn. "If we lose,
at Detroit
the season's not over," says CunEverything that went well for
ningham. "If they lose, it's not the Lions last year hasn't so far this
over for litem.".
season -· &amp;fin three losses by 10
So don't hold your breathy~
polDts. If Erik Kramer starts, does
EAGLES, 24-17
1t change the luck'/
· Miami (plus ll) at Bulralo
SAINTS. 17-14
• How come ihe spread's so bia?
. lndiuapolis (plus 9 V2)
.

th
. e
·

Pirat._es announce pitchers for N.Lpl.ayo_ffs

first
victory in the majors with I 2/3
innings in relief of starter Dave
P~BURGH (AP) - ~Y
BUrba, who lasted 3 1/3 innings.
Jackson s pos~si~!l:,ne.nce
Rijo (IS-10)' allowed seven hits . was the .factor that
. . Pitts·
in 5even innings. .
.
burgh ~ ~~!~. LetheylandNL
·
Cardinals Z, Pblllies 1
to select him as !?'"""" .or
In SL Louis, Donovan Osborne playoffs Game 2m AUantil.
· .
allow.ed five hits in seven innings · Leyland announced his playoffs
and Rod Brewer and Stan Royer rotation Friday on his daily radio
drove in SCCQnd-inning runs.
. show.
Osba'nc (11·9) sb'Uck out three . The matchups for the first three
and walked three. Todd Worrell · games of the NL playoffs are:
pirched a lcoreless eigbth and Lee Game I, Tueaday. Doua Drabelt vs.
Smith finiShed for his' league-lead- John Smoltz; .Game 2, Wednesday,
ing 42nd save.
..
Jackson vs . .Stele Avery; and
Phillies starter Curt Schilling Game 3, Friday in PitlstJm:gh, 20(14-11) allowed only four hits.
game. winner Tom Glav10e vs.
Mets 6, Pirates 3
rookie tnuckleballer Tim Wake·
. In New York, Pete Schourek field.
.
.
.
allowed six bits in eight innings ,
Leyland said he p1clted Jackson

,

4u:!"J

.

-

In CIDcinnati, shorlstop-Freddie
Benavides' throwing error set up a .
four-run third inning as San Fran·
cisco ended CIDcinnati Slarter Jose
Rijo's five-game winning streak.
. Royce Clayton grounded into a
SAFE AT SECOND- Su JrudKo's Dar~
potential inning-ending doubleren
Lewis (rlaht) slides safely Into - d bale
play in the third, but Benavides'
ahead
of the laJ of Clndnnati shortstop Fredclie
throw into right field to let two

run~~~:C:d(1~g&gt;~:M-s

less Benpls while losing d_leir last · ~ two hi~est tJ!Oblems have
two sames. !;- 42· 7 _drubbmg last no sunple solu!IOCII: , .• .
. Su~day agams~ Mmneso_!l was
. - . What.I!I'C they gomg to l!o
the1r most lopsided loss Ul four about theu. horrendous pass
years ind their most dispiriting defenae? ·
mcmen' under their lint-year head
- Can any~ody . fil!lr!: ~ut
coac~.
.
wh~'s WfQIIg w1th Boomer Esll·
W1th the1r bye today, the Ben- son?
gals wound up with two weeks to
The defensive secondary's P~Y
reflect on t~ shortcomin11s and the last,.three weeks hal been dil·
I~ for ;'Oiu!IOCII.
.
~g for a team that thoull\'t
We ve got a lOt of questions 1t could turn around the NFL s
th~t have,to get ~~"Y.ered
w~r def~ merely ~ changing
this two-week period. Shuta
philosophies. It worked Ul lhe pre"We ha~e to regroup andcorrcci season and a .first-week victory
wh~t we ve g_ot !-0 get·_corrected,
over Sea~.
. .
wh1ch seems Significant,If you look
But tile Los Angeles Rruders;
atjusnhis game."
·
the Green Bay Packers and the

Phila4elphia-Dallas, Miami-Buffalo
bot~:ts tabbed 'Games of the Century'

Giants 4, Reds 1

.

. . ·

. T~~y d ove.rco~'e rape:c~se
pub~c1a:J:d Cltywule skeplicum
!b, WID
• rn two~· Shula
wa~ ge11_1~g rav_e rev1ews for
P,!IItlng spmt bact mto a ~-13. team.
. Fans even. were begmnmg t_o
diink lhc: unthinkable- could thiS
te,am be a ·playoff .contender so
soon?
.
; · TwQ games later, they have their
llf1LS)Vtt:.\lream _oo.
·
•, The new; 1m proved Ben gals
have loolced II lot lite the old, hap-

.wr.."

sweet

•

LBengltls use bye ·week to.reflec~ on trials off and .on the field

.

'

1

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt Gallipolis, OH Point Pleuant, wv

OCtober 4," 1992

·

Smoltz-new NL strikeout leade·r
·after'-helpi~g Atlanta
to win
..

:·
:·:;AL contestS;..

.'

.

.:

'

�I
''

rP~eg~a~ca~;:su~nu~
· ~y~n~m~n:;~s~e~nu~ne~I~~~~~~~P~. o~~~~~~~-~M~I~d~d~~~rt~~a~~~~~~~~~~~OH~~=Po~I~M~~::~~~;~wv~~~~~~~~·~~~==~~~~~~r~4~,~1=11~2

•

0: =

~: In the Ohio RiPer's Gallipolis poJI,

,

_

. _. Plastic worms among leading baits for
C~LUMBUS, Ohio (~Pl .Here 1s the final ·w.ee~ly flshmg
~~ f~ 1~ as .JX'OVIdc!t by~~
dmSlon of w.Hdhfe of the OhiO
Departmrilt of Natural Resources:

ontiaditiOnai baits.
·.
~.ye ~sEin 51!ould.improve. Use
SENECA LAKE - •Flathead Jigs Up
w.nh m1nnow.s fished
catfish up to .SO pou~ds may be ·along e botl!Jm and try fishing
taken d~~ ~ everu_ng hours by · below-the dam m Walnut Cleek.
slowly ~ung cut ~ts. Walleye
ALUM CREEK RESERVOIR
Ohio River
~P to 30 inches, crappiCS ~ 10 13 . - Fish the shoreline covel' and in
~n the. Gallipolis pool, large- -~hes and channel catftsh up 10 33 the recessed coves with lOll water
mouth bliSS and hy'?OO striped~ mches are also present ·
baits and night crawle.rs to take
averagmg 12 to 18 mc:hes are beii!i
largemouth bass. Try trolling 11u"gc
taken on rop IVIIIer baits and plastic
Southwest
crank baits near the dam for
worms. Channel catfish averaging
PAINT CREEK LAKE
muskics and -walleyes. Saugeye
· 18 10 2S inches can be taken on tra· S'augeyes up io 26 inches c~tn be fishing beiOIV the ·~~am will improve
' ditional baits ftshed ncar the bot- · takenonjigs8!ldtw.islersbelow.the ·ascoldweatheriiPPJ'OIChes.
'
tom. ·.
.
· dam and arou.nd points and drop,
. Northwest '
In the Belleville pool, walleyes. offs in the lake. Late fall is the best
FERGUSQN RESERVOIR up to 18 inches and saugers up to tim~ to take saugeyes. Ctappic ftsh· Try fishing spreaders tipped with
16 inches are being taken on crank ing is good this lime ~f the year. minnows near the bottom to take
baits used withflaner ~at the Try fishing at depths of four to yellow. perch a~ng eight to 13
. conQuence o the Muskmgum eight feet with mmnows for best mches ..,Opportunities are good for
RiYCr.
results.
'
taking channel catfish up to 13
In the-G~ee~mp tail w.arcr, sauger
EAST FORK LAKE- .Chan: pounds by fishing at night with
averaging 13 10 16 inches are being nel catfish up to 10 pounds can be night crawlers or chicken livers.
taken on minoow.s. Hybrid stripers taken on traditional during evening Bluegills, walleyes, smallmouth
are going. for poppers and being hours. Try the brushy shoreline bass and white bass are also pretaken m good numbers by bO'at areas and wooded coves for crap- sent
·
anglers.
pies. Use live shad fiShed at ilq&gt;ths
PAULDING RESERVOIRSoutheast
' of 10 to 20 feet in open w.aler areas Good numbers of saugeyes ranging
JACKSON LAKE - This 243- to take hybrid striped bass up 10.12 from 12 10 17 inches are in this
· acre lall'c holds (air to good num- pounds.
Pauldi,ng County lake. Fish alo!Jg
. bets of mown bullheads, bluegills,
Central .
the w.mdsw.ept shoreline during
· redear sunfish, largemouth ·bass
HOOVER RESERVOIR ·fall. Use cut baits or night crawlers
· and channel catfish. Use larval Fish along the shallow. shoreline fished along the bottom to take
. baits aild smal! worms to take areas to take qappies, bluegiUs and channel catfish.
' blue gills and sunfish in shallow. largemouth bass. Fishing at the
.Northeast .
water. CatfiSh can be taken during dam is productive this time of year
LADUE RESERVOIR - ·. A
evening and early morning hours as well. As the water cools, saug· potential state record channel cat-•

••

.

(

NHL Smythe Division preview

.

.

· Farnli·BUsiness

_

la~gemouths, ~hybrid -stripers

Bass islands. aro~d Starve Island,
uei 10 • .
• ·,
·
and the area 1\Ytl mtles ~ff ~f Avon. "
In lhe welll:nlbllsin, fJSlDilg has Most anglers a~e fis~mg for
Will« buzz baits. poppen or plastic · been' fair~ w.eaJbtz permitting. Yetwalleyes; but may JIICl'CIISlngly purw.onns fished in sballow w.aler to · low. perch are averaginjl six to 12 J sue yellow. perch in October. One
take larcemouth. bass.-Walleyes, inches. Tbe best areas mclude the of the lDP spots has been the sandand yellow perch are a1ao available Toledo Shipping Channel Maumee bar off of Lorain and lhe area four
for anglm.
.
Bay. the Toledo water u;l8ke. the to sev~n miles north of Huron.
GRAND RIVER - Ollllortuni·
·
tics to take steel head have ·
improVed in rcc:eJ!t yea in this and
.W0 WQ
I '
~ ~~'. .
other Lake Erie tributaries in north•
east~.Late. fall is. tl!ebesttime
to take these fish, however, some
steclbead arc being taken .in near
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - in dlameler. The UronowSk,Js got ·
shore areas.
. Two ancien who missed lbeir tar- the catfish's head in fust and mariLake Erie
ket fish· might land records as a aged to swing the net and fish into
In . the .9cntral basin, yellow.
result.
the boaL
perch fJShmg should ~mam good
Both men were fiShing for wall"It's the biggest-fish I ever
throughout OcJOber w.tth fl8h rangeye last month. ·
· ··· · ·
·· caught," Gronowski said .. He.'s
ing in size from seven ao· 10 irn:hes.
What they got instead was a been fl8hing rdr 30 years.
One of the top spots continues to
steelhead that threatens the state
A couple of da~ after Gronow.sbe thrco to four miles off of Oeverecord and a channel catfish that ki's catch. Bill Frisky of Northfield
laJ:Id's Edgewater~ at the, intake
apJJC!Irs to qualify for state and hooked die potential record steelcnb. AIIJI~ are usmg spreaders
world marks.
head at the LaDue Reservoir 13
tipped with minnows or shiners
Gus GtQnow.ski, 32, of Panna, miles east of Cleveland.
ftshed along the bottom at depths 'landed the charmel cat in Lake Eric
He was casting a. w.eight-forof-:4"S to 52 f~L Some w.~ye are
w!th a little help on the net from his, ward spinner in 72 feet of water
be!flg taken eight to 10 J!liles off of
W.lf~. Lynn. · .
. .
when the stee1Jlcad sttuck at 7:1S
Wildw.O?d ¥ at Euclid. Anglers
The .Ohio Division of Wildlife p.m., he said.
'
are trolling silVCJ;, blue and purple said Gron9w.ski's catfish 'w.as 41
"Things were kind of slow.,''
spoons at ·deptbs of SO 10 6Q.feet.
lfl inches long. It weighed 37.65 Fris~ said. "When things aren't
Sreelhead are oCcasionally taken by
pounds. The record is· 37 i(lches working, you try something differwalleye anglers, but are beginning lind 30 pounds from Ferguson ciiL I went 10 a slow. retrieve.
10 head upstream as colder weather Reservoir in 1987,
"I felt a real good iug and set
imives. The tributaries in northeast
Gronowski said he used ei~ht· · the hoot. I started reeling, then
pound test Trilene XT hne. heard a splash way out from the
!'dJ!I!!!filam~tJjne often is stronger lxiaL I thought 'Wbal's thai?' 1 fig.
than JIB rating, but that shouldn't ured I was ftshing 20 feet down.
trouble Gronowski. His fish But my line was straight out"
appeared to beat the 12-pound line
The owner of the boai. Steve
class world record by more than Skapura, netted the trout on the
· The Kings have Gretzky, but three potDJds.
· 'second try, Frisky said. Frisky's
tlley are long in the tooth. New.
. Janice Scudder, w.o~ld records cau:h weighed 19.78 pounds·and
L.A. coach Barry Melrose led secretary of the lntemauomil Game was 36 1/4 inches long. The record
Adirondack to the American Hock- Fish A_ssociation, said the J2..- is 18 pounds arid 38 1/2 inches
ey League title.
· pound hne class record for channel from Lake Erie in 1989.
·
San Jose could use its shark's catfiSh is 34 ~lll!ds• 2 ounces.
A combination of·w.eight and
teeth as.a spoiler.
. Gronowski said he would apply length is used to detennine state ·
Last seasoa's Smythe Division for a world record in- the 12-poun4 recotds.
'
results: l. Vancouver, 96 points class.
,
.
If Frisky's steelhead is certified
. (4th in the NHL). 2. Los Angeles,
The Gronow.skis were ~lling a as a record, some credit will be.due
84 points (lOth in the NHL). 3. ~11-ounce chartreuse and while Hot tAndy Emrisko, a charter captain at
Edmonton, 82 points (12th in the
~ Tot when the channel catfish the marina where Skapura moors
NHL). 4. Winnfpeg, 81 points hit
.
his boat. Emrisko told Frisky to
(13th in the ·NHL). 3. Calgary, 74
"I've had a•lot of luck with that have his catch weighed on an
points (16th in the NHL). 6. San crankbait," Gronow.s~ said. "It's a)lptOved scale. .
Jose, 39 points (22nd in the NHL).
caught walleye, crappte, bullheads,
"If it wasn't for Andy, 1 was
(C) 199:?NEWSPAPER bass, channel catS and perch. I was ready to ·put a lcnife in" to clean it,
ENTERPRISE ASSN,
hoping it was a big walleye."
· said Frisky 41.
·
;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:!Tb:e;.:::::.~~w.:as~l8~.:i!':ch:els-==~· =~·~· :;..,..
1
·
·
'
'
. tiBh

was~

The Oilers, reduced to a haveDefense wins everywhere and
not franchise after winning five the Canuclcs outwork everyone in
Stanley Cups fro
. m 1983 throu~h l)te regular season, driven by coach
1990, still came out of the Smytne Quinn. The playoffs are a different
Division, as usual, at playoff ume. matter. This season will tell if VanWith OM Glen Sather wheeling· couver is for real.
11nd dealing, they are always a
Calgary still has solid personnel.
thrcal.
They resisted the urge to trade
The Winnipeg Jets made the goalie Mike Vernon, and they Still
playoffs-last season. squeezing out haven 'cadre of good forwards .
the Flames. But that might 1101 hap- King will restore order and espirit
pen again.~ are haJd feelings de ccxps.
_
between the two teams. The Flames
Edmonton (mean in~ Sather)
offered a mega-bud:~ 10 porcn- already has dumped its high scorer
lia1 superstar Teemu Selannie, a Jet of last season, Vincent Dam~draftee from Finland. Then Win- housse. H~ went to Montr.eal 10
nipeg general ~er Mike Smith exchange for tough Shayne Corson
matched the offer, giving the young and haJd-w.orking Brent Gilchrist.
forward a three-year, $2.3 million ·· Damphousse is talented (38 goals
contract- the most ever paid by in 1991-92), but he doesn't show.
the JetS.
·
up at crunch time.
·
San Jose flted general manager
The Jets now. have Selannie and
Jack Ferreira in a revamping of lhe a hiJhly-motivated cast
front office. They outsold the other
23NHLteamswithagreatmarketSports briefs
ing effM built around their Sharlcs

By NORMAN MacLEAN ..
The Smythe Division is still the
~ NHL's version of the run and gun,
·the· skill group thilt prefers to
· outscore its opponents.
. The best defensive team in the
Smythe, the Vancouver· Canucks,
got besten rather easily in the playoffs last season by the Edmonton
Qilcrs, led by former New. York
RaiiJer Bemie Nicholls and fonner
Detroit Red Wing Joe Mutphy.
Vancouver topped the Smythe
in tbc regular ~~cason; outdistancing
the high-scoring Los Angeles
Kings .. The Kings have Wayne
Qtetzky. but a very porous and
elderly defense.
The Calgary Flames, a one-time
powerhouse (Stanley Cup winners
· ·as late as 1989), hired former
Canadian Olympic coach Dave
King to run their bench. They're
still reeling from the disasuous
trade of center ,Doug Gilmour to
Toronto and poor ~S by CX·
scorinJ stars Joe Nieuw.eadyk and

fnll!l ~in~ , &lt;?'lio will~~ opportu"ni-

.

Thecren Fleury.

.Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE - This week's
activities scbedule for Lyne CenJei
is as follows:
'
GJ111naslum hours .
Sunday- 2-4 p.m. and 5:30-7
p.m .• open recreation
MOIIday- closed
Tuesday - 8-9 p.m ., collece ·
• . rccnation ·
WedJJesclay- closed
Th•rsday - 8-9 p.m., college
rccnation
Friday- 5:30-7 p.m., open
rccnation
· .- S.turday - closed for basket. , ball~· clinic, 9 a."m.-3 p.m.
•, . Sunday, Oct. 11- 1-3 p.m.
" .and 5:30-7 p.m., open recreation

~=::ei!:~i'!!i~are
stm an

NEwvJl:t&lt;~f~TheNBA

The ~redicted ' or . of f ish ' averted a pOiential lockout of its
(and head coaches) fo
HL referees when it came to a tbreeSmythe Division in 1992-93: 1. year contract acreement with the
Vancouver (Pat Quinn); 2. Calgary officials union.
(J?ave King); 3. Edmonton (Ted
Terms of the deai weren't
Green); 4. Winnipeg (John .Pad- revC41ied, but the extension through
dock); S. Los Angeles (Barry Mel- the 1994-9S season is expected 10
rose); 6. San • Jose (George provide the officials with a sizeable
Kingston). .
pay increase.

,

· Proctor &amp; Gamble Co.
I

1986 CHEVY CAMARO
T·IDpt, .........atic, air, laded,

. S'Wiffi

. · Wednesday - 8-9 p.m.• col·
. ·iegc swim · .
!liursday - 8-9 p.m., college
~rlday -

.

.

GIBSON
.
FRIGIDAIRE
KELVINATOR
WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE
PREMIER
SUNRAY

'

,

•

,'

.

.

BfsTAN EVANS
which benefits Procter &amp; Gamble's
GALLIPOLIS - · P,rocler &amp; cash flow. and margins (changes in
' Gamble recendy said it is lowering w.orking ~pital added $228 million '
COLUMBUS • .Ohio (AP) ', its diaptz t*Jces by 7 percent, and to Procler &amp; Gamble's cash flow. in
Ohio's
unemployment rate dJqJped
. reducing deals to the tradC and coo- fiscal 1992; in part. w.e believe, bein
September
because few.er people.
. poning 10 concause of these new. operating paliare
looting
for jobs, the Ohio .
sumer (the excies);andthatittumsthelittentionof
I!ureau
of
Employment
Services
penses ror which
rctailenandconsumersalikemoreto
said.
are acc:ounled for
product differentiation than to relaThe end of student summer jobs
by a ieduction in
· tive pricing, which helps the best
caused part of the 0.5 ~tdrop
'· the sales line) )ly 4
brands.
in the jobless tare to 7.1 percent in
· percent This is
Promotions such as coupons for September; James Conrad, OBES
8nother in a long
the conumer will remain for new. ._administrata, said Friday.
line of shifts in
product launChes 10 encourage purIn September 1991, the rate was
several product categories iOw.ard chase of products that the consumer 6.4 DeiCCIIt .
·
1
what Procter &amp; Gamble calls "Value doesnotyetknow..Finally,iflhenew
' Thc economy is Sli11 not showpricing", which w.e have commenled policy does not work. Procter &amp; in~ the ability to gencra1e the new.
' on scvmil times. Indeed, in ~· Gamble could simply reverse itself jobS needed for sustained imJX'(lveConrad
' ' Procter &amp; Gamble reduced pneing and begin to inch up both pricing and ment
. .in the job mllltet,"
.
'
said
and promotional activity by S~nt promotions. •.
He said Ohio remains competieachinMay.(UnfavorablcarticleSin
. Moreover. cootrary to common
tive
in the job m81tet compared to
the Wall Sb'Cet Journal have hiJh· perceptioo,Procter&amp;Gamble'svalue
other
large industrial states.
lighted the price reductions, but not pricing does not prevent supennar.
September
unemployment rarcs
. . thereductionsinpromotionalspend- kets.from continuing 10 piu:h highfor
tO
other
major
industrial states
. ing.)
IOIV pricing to the consumer. if tl!ey
also
were
released
by the U.S.
The shi~ are either n'euttal to s0 wish, 10 generarc traffic. As in the
Department of Labor.
Procler &amp; Gamble's top line or days before the massive. trade deals
In California, the rate was 9.4
, slightly neglllive. If pricing is ~ .off~byvendors,~superm~ets percent; New. Jersey and New.
• duced more than promotions; as 1s 1 can SJmply mark up prOducts by h1gh York. 9 percent; Flonda, 8.9 per· the case this.time, Procter &amp; Gamble margins during some periods and by cent; Michigan, 8.8 percent; Mas• is ntaking an effort, at its 0\VD ex- exceptionally low. margins during S!Hihusetts, 8.6 percent; Texas. 7.7
pense, 10 help out lhe traditional other periods.
.
petCMt; Pennsylvania, 7.6 pen:ent;
; "high-IOIV" supermarkeis duriilg a
Procter &amp; Gamble's competitors Illinois, 6. 7 perceni;' and Nortb
t transition period while they reduce are rending to follow. suit. They more Cilrolina, S.9 percent ,
the massive forw.ud buying that they or less have to lower their prices to be
In the past year the number of.
;, had acc:derarcd in the '1980s (in re- commensurate with Procter &amp; Ollibans working increased by
: sponsc to miiShrooming trade deals Gamble.' a, and if they do not reduce 60,000 from .allout S million,
~ by vendors) and bring down their promotions accordingly, lheir mar- OBES said. Tbe number of unem&lt; working capital costs so that tbcy, . ginsaresqueered.lnsomecasesthey ployed increased by 42,000 from
' .
\
: .· too, can benefit or at least not suffer · are electing to take the risk to their 349,000.
OBES
said
S.l
million
Ohioans
ProciCr &amp; Gamble's poliCies.
margins of not reducing dealS fer a
)
JfthepricingshiftisslighdY.DCJII- . while in hopes of gaining market hall jobs in Septembc~. doYin
, •jveforProcrcr&amp;Gamble;asthisone share With better Jerms tban Procler 17,000 from Augus\- The accncy
· is,itistypicallymoreorlessmadeup &amp; Ganlble's, but w.e have seen no said 391,000 residents were unem' for-andeventuallyShouldbemore evidence that such ploys in general ployed in September, down from
in AugusL
I
} thanmadeupfor--()l)themarginline are being sustained or are .worlring. 423,000
Ohio's civilian labor force
by lhe efficiencies of Sleadier pro- Indeed, discussions with some of
about S.S million people
: duction and delivery. Meanwhile, Pnx;ter &amp; Gamble's leading com- included
in Septcmber,-compared with 5.6
&gt; f&gt;rocrer&amp;Oambleaeatedanew.trade petitors indicate that they IQO- almillion in August. 1'he share of lhe
. promotion. that both encourages re- beit perhaps not publicly- are in working-age population in the
: tailer5 and is consistent with the fl!voroftheshifttoconsisrcntpricing labor force was 66.4 percent in .
: cOmpany's efforts to maintain stead· and minimalized promotions and are Septembc;r and 67 percent in .
:· ierproduction.Retailersarerew.arded pleased that Procrer &amp; Gamble is August. the agency said.
•: for ·doing a predelennined level of taking the responsibility for lhe con:: busineSs with Procter &amp; Gamble for uoversial change. Procter &amp;
given year- in w.harcver products Gamble's recent U.S. results, while
; the retailers chose.
w.ealc, are no w.ealcer than those of
:, There is skepticism thatProcler &amp; any of ita canpetitors -nor do its
; · Gamble will maintain ·low. special- market shares in the.aggregate show
LANCASTER, Ohio (AP) :: deal promotional activity. We point significant slippage.
Union members at an Anchor
· outthatpriortothe 1980s,Proc~r&amp;
We continue to lite ProciCr &amp; Hocking ~lant went on strike Satur·
: Gamble \VIIS notoriously anti-promo- Gamble stock fmintanationalgrow.th daymommg. ·
: · lion and heavily pro-advertisiiJg, combined with reatriJCturing poten·
Police were noiified that the
:- because advertising appeals to the lia1 and believe that w.e w.ill see accel- strike bef!an at 9 a.m., said police
.: consumer 10 buy for quality rather etating profit growth offshore and Capt. William Parrisb. He said
: · than price. In other words, Procrcr &amp; hear more of restructuring from the pickets w.ere·.not immediately put
. Gamble'scwrent shift fits within its comJ1811Y within'thenextsixmonths: m place at the glass plant
• ciXpol'IIIC history. The two reasOns
[Mr.EvllllllsaninvestmentbroThe American Flint Glass
: for "value pricing" are that it allows ker for The Ohio Company it its Workers Union representS 1,300
employees at the planL.
:· steadier j,roduction and delivery, Gallipolis oftice.)

,, from

I

Our Showroom

Dtqtlay• Over

SaturdaJI- closed
. ,, Sund•y, Oct.• 11- 1-3 p.m.
. and 5:30-7 p.m., open swim
·

Workers strike
at glass plant

:· a

' '

100QuaUty

.BrandN.-

Other home athletic eveniB
. TIHiday - Soccer vs. Shawnee
;. state. 3:30p.m.

AppnaDee• At A
PdceTbat'a
Easy On Your

Sports deadUnes post~d

Pocket.-

.

Our On-Staff Service
·Department Stocks
Parts and Stands
Ready, In Case You

1986 CHM MONTE CARLO

· Ever Need Them.

as

Hurry% quautltlel' ·
J.ladted Anti '111ey 1\n
GolniFutl

;,=t

. SET ss99 .

SAYES
YOU
MONEY! .......
.

su1w ·RUTLAND
742·2211

FURNITURE ·,~k

. "We Service What.We Sell'\

lUll mEET • RUnAIID, OJIIO

·I·IOO-IlJ•S217

·. .

.'

f81'•, lt•tnred bJ tlie G8llla Soli a•d 'W•ter
C-rv8tioll Dlltrtcl, II loeated IOPMWbere In
&lt; GaUJa C011Dt)'. IJidlylclaall wilhlDI .10 Jllll'tlcl1 Jllllt .. lbe welldy COil.....y do 10 .,. aam'na
tbe farm'• vwlWI'. JIJit . .u; or drOP oft' your .
1 gueu to the D•III. Sntlnel, 111 Gout St.,
11 .Pomeroy, Oblo, 4571if, or the G•Ulpolll DIIIIJ
Trl'buae, U5 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Oblo,

l

'

•
CLASSIC ERB TRACI'OR • David T. Erb,
Vintoa ._ euaed tile JM...-y page in the 199~
Clasilc Pua TriiCton C•lendar by Du Pont
w1t11 his.c.efely ~ 1929 Case L tractor.
Tbe Model L fe•tllred tbe nrst la-llne Case
eap.e, a •lllor depu1ure fnllll the crOIISiilouat
e•glaes j::.ae llad }lrevlously used. Built in
Radae, Wis., tbe Case L 4-cJUnder overhead

valve motor with .• 4· 5/8" bore and , .. stroke
develops 26 drawbar hp at 1,100 rpm. Beeause
or Its smooth running engine it became popular
with tbreshermen.and $8WDIIU operators. .Pressure lubrlcatl9n prolonp engine life. This' fourth
edition ol the calendar IS a nationally distributed
publication from Dli Pont.

Vinton restoration featured
in classic tractors cale;ndar

VINTON • David T. -Erb, Vin- herbicide, Accent com herbicide
"FFA members Don Pearte and
· ton~. has received national reoogni- and other ~protection p:oducts. Ray Bragg took the Case down 10
tion fQr the restoration of a 't929
"The M I L featured the· fli'St the lowest common denominator
Case L tractor. The vintage in-line Case engine," says Erb, and did all the wort themselvest
machinegracestheJanuarypageot FFA instructor and publisher of says Erb. "The tractor got epoxy,
the 1993 Classic Farm Tractors Old Abe's News, the J.I. Case regular primers, plus four coats of
Calendar by DuPont Apicultural magazine. ''Previously, Case trac- . finish."
·
Products, mater of Classic soybean tors had crossmount engin~s. so Built in Racine, Wisconsin, the
this was a majordei!Btl~·
Case L 4-cylinder overhead valve
..
motor with a 4- 518" bore and 6"
stroke develops 26 draw.bar hp at

Far.m Flashe "

•
h
d
•
H

d

•
Ig . airy pro uction
re.COrd S are recogn.I•z·e.d

~~ni:~g!~~~~

:=

with threshermen and sawmill ·
operators. Pressure lubrication pro,
longs engine life.
each cow. in those herds produce
"Our 1993 Classic Farm Trac2,500 gallons of milt or more pe~ tors Calendar. imce again prinled ·
year. In addition, another 8 or 10 with soy-oil ·ink, is the fourth ediherds on test have Rolllngl;Ierd tion we've produced."· says John
averages of 16.000 pounds or inore HarVey, Du Pont industry relations
ofmilk.
manager. "As always, the hardest
The current average for all part was selecting only a few trac- ·
herds on test is 17,578 pounds. tors from the hundreds of beautiful
That is up 847 pounds from last examples submitted. This year,
year or )USt over a S percent however, we increased the number
mcrease m one year. Rising costs of JriiCIOrs included from 14 to 15;"
of operation almost' dictate these The 1993 Calendar (Dec. 92 ·Dec:.
kind$ of increases in order to stay . '93), a companion full color poster
in business.
.
. and an hour-long vid.eo are at!
A 16-page review. of"lssue S~ is available 'for purchase from Du
now. available at County Extens1on Pont by callmg-toll free 1-8004- ·
Offices. Tl!e review. is in a ques- FARMS-I (1-1100-432-7671) or ·
tion-and-answ.er format w.jth writing ClasSic Tractors, P.O. Box .
JIIISw.ers supplied by both propo- · 1755, Wilmincton, Delaware
Continued on D-8
19899. ·
·•

By EDWARD 'VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS • The Septenlber
28, 9J1io Crop-Weather report estimated that only one percent of
Ohio Corn has been harvested
compared 10 about 2S percent at the
same time last year. In Gallia
County. with silo ftllinc complete
on many fanns, some record tonnage per acre yields are being harvested. In some cases it has taken
one-third less acres 10 ''fill" than in
JWCVioUs years.
.
·. A special
.. is in order
for some hi~roduction
records. Three hcrils in Gallia
County now. !J•vc ·D.H.I. Rolling
Held Avorqe Mi11t Production of
21,500 pounds or more of milt. In
consumer terms this means tha~

~,

POMEROY •. Ivan L. Wood of Bonnie W11t11er .Od Lora Wolfe ·
LOng Bonom completed a 36-~ reside in. the Chester/Long Boaom
career with Ohio Power Co. on . area; .all five 11randchildren are
Thursday, retiring as • line Ma.rbY. too.
IIIOC'-Ic-Aili'Omem)'.
tvilod •iid his wife, Evelyn,
· Wood q~llliaJied 10
may tty navel, but they have ·
. ·~
· · 1 bla tlei'Yice,
ning a full aaenda planned: spoiling
.·a· 19 a a
was f:dchlldren ·and tending to their
· loom
·_
then ao·· ""'
·"'- ..._,·.
·
.......,.. ·ao
\IU"&amp;&amp;V
-•u
inO.u-B in · ·1960 ud line
A delcon Ill Bildford a.urch of ·
. · medwnlr•A in 1972.
t:hrist. Wood ·aJio Dl8nl to bci:Ome
· EnjoyiD( hl1 f•m,ily, charch .. ~involved in cfiun:h Etivitic;s.. .·
IIIII pr•Jcollna ~-a
He .Is a vetenn of the Kor,can
· the Chelter aative'netirement ' Confl•cr(I9S2·19S4) and 11 a · &lt;
pllnl. Sblce b1a four c:lllldreu -10111 member o! die Pomero7 Alnerkan .
, Keillund llodQey 1111C1 d.ugb~ l4ion Poll

Pomel._

.Nest wee~ 1 Melp Coanty fua wiD bt featurtc1 bJ tile Mtf11 Sollllld Water c - tlltlol
Dlltrlct.
· : '.1
.

'.

.

IVAN WOOD
.

tf
''

•

••i
win • $5 prlae fro• til~
:1:
·
·
Co
LeiWe
......
Plile
w::::·ft.
PublllliiDI
alley
Oblo
· ud _ . . e Dlllllbtr
· wltll·--.
Ero--··"
.ft.-c.·
adclnu
JOI!r card'
or letter. No telep.._ calli wW be IICCiptetL All
eaatllt eatrleiMolllll be hiraed in "to tile p8per ollke by 4 ti•· ..a Wlll'n by. Ill cae
of • tit, 1M wirier wUI be c._n IJy lottery.
fi•..,....••
45631~•nd 7lt•

. MYSTERY PARM - 'lllll week's mJBterJ

DELIVERY

ing capaCity by about 40 percent
si~8S, when IBM reigned •
the unchallenged tiuiD of tbC ~put.er indus~ry.
· .
.. ·
· General Motors Corp., mean,
while, widened a drive to sq~
billions of dollars in savings out ol
its •vast-network of parts suppliers,
pan of the No. I automaker's ~
to q!Jit bleeding moner by shrink,
ing. GM lost $12 bilhon in North
(\merican v~hicle manufacturing
last year.
.
The newly appointed purc~ing
executive of GM said that supply
and service contracts for all-its
global operations, not just carmak·
ing, were subject to review and
renegotiation.
·
The cost-cutting crusade by this
executive, J. I~nacio Lopez de
ArriQrtua, has mitated many of
OM's suppliers, who had gro\Vll
accustomed to relying ·on ·the company as a stable source of business:
One of them, Rockw.elllntemationat· Corp., withdrew. plans .to
provide parts for OM's electric car
after it reportedly was asked to
rebid on the contract.
•

Wood co~pletes career
with Ohio Power fir~

FREE

C,

ltlldio Of ~boice and
1M diJ ldllhe opportunily to
pu61ilb these .sports photos and
U'liclel during the IPPfOIIIiate sea·
1
JOD b that sport. .

'

·REFRIGERATOR......................................... ~··•······•...........................................$699
22 CU. FT. WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE (Big Bln) ...~..................,...... ~.............~ .....~ ..$698
16 CU. 'FT. GIBSON. REFRIGERATOR....................................................................$499
18 CU. FT. KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR..,.....................................................$599
24 CU. FT. KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR(Ice Maker/Water in D.oor)...........$1399
22 CU. FT. WHITE·WESnNGHOUSE . ·
.
REFRIGERATOR (Ice Maker/Water in Door)......,......................................... $1299
19 CU. FT. GIBSON SIDE·BY·SIDE REFRIGEAATOR........................................$799
SELF..CLEANING TAPPAN ELECTRIC RANGE...............;..................~..............$499
ELECTRIC FRIGIDAIRE RANGE WITW SOLID .BURNER .................................$449
RANGE...........~ ..............;................................................$389
DELUXE GAS SU- NRAY
... . ·--·-·····················..,..,..,·

5 : 3~- 7' P-111 .. open

.· !J::*i'P7
--~.e:'t!.a:

'

21· cu: F'f."GfBIOA;f:IOOIOATRE-or KELVINATOR

SW.Iffi

n- (lewUincs have been insti-

u avr&amp;G

'

.

. The Gallipoli~ Daily TribUlle,
· The Daily Sentinel, the Point
. Pleasanl Resister and the SIUidQy,
• Tlmts-Stnlinel value the contribu.tions their readers make to the
sports sections of tbcse papciS, and
these contributions will continue to
be' blished.
.
.
· ffowever, certain deadlines for
,Ubmissions wiD be observed. The
deadline fqr submissions of local
- baseball- and softball-related photos and related articles, from T-ball
. to the majors, as well
other
•spring and summer sports, is the
: day of die lasl game of the World
•Series. Likewise, the deadline for
, llhOtoe and related articles far foot. hiD 8lld other fall aports is d\e,Satbefore the Super Bowl. The
:
ne forpbotoa and llilllt.ed llli~les for tsml ectJell ud other winler
is the lasl day of the NBA . ·

·

INSINKERATOR

Poolhoun
Tod•y ..,. 2-4 p.m. and S:30- 7
, p.m., open swim
MOIIday - closed
:ruesday - 8-9 p.m., college

~m

VALUE· SERVICE· SELECTION· PRICE
nuu IM

NEW YORK (M') - Even the Coldwell Banter rw·estate busifiercest flesh-eating dinosaurs liess to shaJpen the focus on retailcould .die in die quil-k5and no mat- ing.
.
·
ter bow. hard they thrashed. It's a
That essentially will put Sears
prehisiQric primer on survival that back where it was two decades ago,
hasn't been lost on their modem- before under1alting a grand l?lan tO
day COI]Kiiate equivalents.
diversify into financial scrv1ces in
Some of the biggest and most what became known as the ·'stocks
feared companies in
lOOk and socks" plan. Investors wetbig srcps this past w.eet 10 disman- corned the reversal, seeing it as a
tie, unwind or reverse strategies sign that Scars management realthat had given them their weight iz.es that strategy VIIS a flop. · ·
and breadth in the first place.
At the same time, International
Once an enviable atlribute, size BusiiiCS$ Machines Corp. intensiis seen increasingly as a ~bility. fied its effort to shrink the .bloat
That's puticularly so when it bin- · that had given the leading comput·
ders the quick response, agility and er mater enormous overhead,
adaptability required to .make shrunken profits and.limited ability
money in today's w.eak and unpre- to keep pace with nimble compeudictable ClC0110111Y· "
tors who mate today's technology
The most notable example .was outdated every few. months.
Scars, Roebuck and Co., the oneIBM said it was trimming $2.1
time giant of middle-class mer- billion worth of buildings and
chants that has foundered for years equipment and nearly doubling the
as leaner rivals bave overtaken it cost of a program to shrink the
with better prices and shrc..tder company's global workforce
JIIllltering.
through early retirements and job
In a stunning move to tum back buyouts.
the clock, Sears said it would
That means _the company will
divest its Dean Witter Financial have reduced 1ts work force by
Services Grou11 ancl most of the about 25 percent and manufactur-

,,

.

Looldng For•••

·

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Ohio jobless
· ra~e drops in
September

:: Money Ideas

TAPPAN

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QUALITY~

•boui 12 to 15 full and part time wurkeri •Dd
offers a pool, bot tub and a poolside meetin1
room. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin PIDsoD)

OPEN FOR BUSlNESS • The Gallipolis
Super 8 Motel, localed 81 lhe root of the Silver
Bddge on Upper River Road, opened for busi·
ness last week. Tbe 48-room .motel employs

&lt;

RUTLAND FURN ITU RE
You~re

'

America

____,

Gives You What

.

are c11tbng back
'

lleye angle•'S .,,De'l ·.
• l.recor,
· djish
zn oth erpotentia

·

.

Big corporations
.

T

·

Section ·D
OCtober 4, 11182

S!llllm~•. F,iah at rught With ttaditlooa1 baits~ best results. U11e top

:Vancouver tabbed to lead finesse fraternity
.

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(

Pomenay •cldleport Gll"~polll, ~ Point PI-nt, wv

02-Sunday 11m•• . sentinel

· October~; 1'882

Octqber 4, 1882

Former Perot backer .may tile lawsuit over alleged credit· checks . AKRON ohiO (AP) _ A former Ohio v~unreer coordinatOr for
. ·Ross Perot's JlleSidetltial campaign
may file a lawsuit over alleged
credit checks or voliDiteen.
Bill Sweet, a Cleveland area
cSaid he is trying 10 find out
1
!~~~stigated what he said wen:
credit checks of some 90 voh,l n·
teers for Perot in Ohio and olher
·

statts.
.
.
. Sweet told _the ~on B~on
Jo~l in an. m~ew published
Fnday that he believes the checks
were ma~ by a priv~ detective
agency hired by Perot. .
.
But a Perot campa1gn .
spokeswoman denied the allega·,
bon.

· SMCt IBid ~-wOrk ~ form yiile ~ ~uome oftklelllid for
the bills f~ a~ivil orcriminll cue 1nvesugauons of allotatlona . ~t
alleiiiiC violalionl or f~ laws some. ~palgn wciitm had 11111JOWIIIIIIII~IIII'or~-~IIDDIOIIrialed funds or had aiminal
'"l'llere 111· ~· illepii!JC re.ionla. .
.
f?C ~~~!formation in our bpinIn a IWCID~t n:leued -Fnday,
1011, be llid.
.
.. .
Perot campa1gn. spokeswoman
A Paot camp111gn offac~ ~~ Sharon ~liMn Sll;id lllcrc wt~e no
~ ~ thal Perot Jlllld or unauthorized credit checks or vola Jll'lvalie sec1Uity ~pany 10 pro.
-.

lmteajs or 111yb0dyelae.

'~Unbcblo\mst 10 Mr. Pm!t, on

• hea deathS among' u
c·ould eQSJl'V be •nduced
.Dtarr
. •s. t"nt.J'..antS
...,.

Oh···o br'···e·

•

·f

0

.

trial errors

•.

..
•
;
:
•

e

_,.'Y to llll!r a~ M 1tanyou ,_ llrongty. about. .
had alwayo 111tlc:lpllled.

tt lhouklll't .,.

llft.

•

•

.
·.
Gi~Is," and "In the Heat of the
Night." which portray ·and appeal
toplderpeoplct. ·
The second \vas a recent Kirkus
book review that ridiculed Greeley's· !Mth novel, "The Wages of
Sin," for offering "safe sex for
seniors" in the portrayal of passion
between ·a man in his §Os and a
woman in her late 40s.
''The image of passionate love
between older people as grotesque
is dominant in American society,"
G~ey said in his repon.
It may be t~at the_last great
Amencan ~boo IS pass1on. among
the elderly, he :w~. alk!lng that
v1~ually no socmlog1cal hterat_ure
exists about ·sexual pass1on
between !lldermen and women.

"Their sex may be better

as "Matlock,'' ' "The Golden

(AP) _.

•

..

STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT
AND
CIRCULAnON
1. TlttaofPubUcatlon:Tbe
sunday n~M~-Sentlnet, Pubtlcatlon No. 528-500.
: · 2. Data ot Filing: Octobar
1, 1992.
3. Frequency of taaua:
Weekly.
A. No. Olt'\fuaa Publlahed
Annually: 52
B. Annual SubacrtpUon
Price: ~.80.
. 4. Location ot Known Of.

D3

~of non-Serbs, a practice knOwn
as 'ethnic cleansing." ·
· There have been reports of mass ..
ban would actual y be sifning a killings, rapes and other audcities
clpitulation,:• said Ma .-Gen. by both stdes, bui most of the
Zivomir Ninki&gt;vic, commander of charges have been-leveled at the
theBosnianSerbairforce.
Serbs. Althoughmostoftheallega"If the ban is implemented, we tions .unnot be proved, human
will consider the United States 111 rights organizations and Western
an aggressor and an occupier in JOvemments say evidence increasBosnia," said l}iljana Plavsic, the mgly indicales that at least some of
top aide to Bosnian Serb leader them are true.
Radovan ~ic.
The Americans took the lead il)
·" The Serbs have about 40 ~~ resuming the relief airlift. deliverthe Yugoslav army left beh 1nd ing 10 tons of food aboard a U.S.
when it withdrew from Bosnia. ear- C-130 that landed midday, -said
lier this year. The republic's Mus- officials of the U.N. High CommisIim•led defense fortes have no air- sionerforRefugees. .
crafL
Agency officials said three
Peace envoys in Geneva have American, two Ftench and po6Sibly
obtained an agreement from the two Canadian flights wen: planned
major warring factions 10 demilita- for Sunclay.
rize parts of Sarajevo. But casual.Food and shelter are in dangerties continue to be nigh around the ously shon supply throughout the
republic, and the flow of refugees· country, where more than ·14,000
is accelerating.
people have been killed since MusIn the Banja Lulca area of north-. lims 81Jd Croats voted in February
ern Bosnia, the U.N. refugee agen- to secede from Setb-dominated
cy said it feared 200,000 people Yugoslavia. Ethnic Serbs, backed
would flee in coming weeks by the Yugoslav army, rebelled,
because of an escalating campaign and comrortwo-thirds of me repul&gt;by Serb nationalists to rid the terri~ lie.
·

war-ilamaged homes. •
Meanwhile, the commander of
the Bosnian Serbs' air force said he.
wouldbe"capitulating"ifhewen:
tp ac':ept a flight ban over the
republic, as suggested by the West
On SaiGTday., Bosnian Serb air·
craft bombarded Tesanj and Zenica, b~th no'nhwest of Sarajevo,
Croa_uan radio reported, citing
Bosnaan radio.
. Almost d!lily reports of Serb air
ra1ds have led Western allies to
urge the United Nations 10 set up
"no-fly" wne for combat flights
ov_e r Bosnia. President Bush said
Fndar he backed the proposal and
pro_aru~ to enforce it with military
acuon if necessary.
1be growing suppon for a flight
ban _is a de)lOitun: from the West'.s
earher reluctance to authorize military_ force fo~ anythinji!Jut the protee!lon of_re!lef supP!1es: The inter. nauonal wrlift to bes1eged Sarajevo
was s~nded on Sept 3, after an
.. l~l.ian relief-plane, was downed,
killmg aU four crew.
Bosnian Serb officials vehe-

a

D oc
· tors urge· fl u sh o1·s despz·1e

t
·
n·
.
unce~ azn es

ATI.ANTA (AP) _Hospitals, Cont;rol in A~ta is urgin~ people mlll)y pllices nin out. So this year
nursing homes and doctors around at highest nsk of co~phcauons manufacturers have provided 50
the country are urging patients to fn:lm the flu 10 get vacc1R8ted early million doses, up from 32 million
get flu shots in the wake of last.. thiS fall.
.
last year.
·
year's epidemic.
• · !he CD&lt;; recommends a vacci"Of the people who need the flu
. ·But the)' agree with public nau~ for anyone over age 65, in a vaccine, only about30 pereent usu• health officials that there's simply nursmg home, who has heart or ally get it," said Dr. Henry Feder
no way to tell if such precautions !ung problems or a w~akened Jr. of the -University of CoMecticut
are really necessary. ·
'
1mmlll!e system. The vaecme takes Health Center, which was nel!fly
. "It's very difficult to ~uessti- effect m two weeks. · .
full with flu patients last winter.
mate what will happen dllnng this ~ Ev_ery year, flu kills 10,000 "Maybe with the· idea of a cold
flu seaso_n,' • said Dr. Kat_hle~n Amencans.
winter and the problems we had
_ Gekowska of Cooper Hosp1tal m
Flu season usually begins in last year, that number will
Camden, N.J., which was so early winter, but last year it was in increase." ~·
crowded with flu patients last year full swing by Octob~r and had
Doctors also hope the vaccine
that ii ordered ambulances 10 take , reached epidemic proportions by will work. Because different flu
all but the most critical patients to December.
strains circulate every year, there's
other hospitals.
People flooded public health no foolproof way to know which 10
The federal Centers for Disease clinics seeking the vaccine, and ·, fight.

Ava., GanlpoUa, Ohio, Galla

County45831; 111 Court SL,
Pomeroy, Dhta, Malga
County, 45718.
I. l..acaUon at the Head,
qu-a or General Bu810tflcaa of the Publlahera:l25
Third Ava., Galllpotla, Ohio,
GoUla County '45631; 111
Courl St, . P-oy, Ohio,
Melga County, 45718.
I. Pubtlaher: Robert L
Wl~ell, Byraouae, Ohla
45
• Managing Editor:
HobartWIIaonJr., Third Ave.,
Gatllpotla, Ohio 45631.
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co., 111 Court SL, Pom•oy,
Ohla, Multimedia Ina., 305 S.
Main SL, P.O. Ba1 1118,
Greenville, S.C. 2Hll2.
7. ParliN holding 1 JIO!'•
081'11 or mora of outatandln'g
·~ ol Common St'ock;
Cede &amp; Co. oJo The Dapoaltary Truat C:;;,, P.Q. Bo1 20,.
Bowllna G.... Slellon, Naw
Yark, MY 10274; Dorothy P.
B&amp;~rgeu,

ville, 8C 21107; Oanevlve
LMke Saba, 201 Chapman
1

Rd., Ga:Mnvllle, BC 2Hll5;
RoberiA.Jollay, Jr~ P.O. Bar
17127, Graanvllla, IC 28101;
Kray I ·Co., One Ananclal
Plaae, 448 .1. LaSalle Sl,

In Loving MMiory

of WOODROW W.
Chicago, IL 10805.
DEVAULT
1. PartiM .holding notaa
who p1a111d awiiY
·in exoe.. of1....-.taftotal
thrH y11rt ago Ocl · :lnclebtadneu: Banlll.af Call,tomla, N.A., 'Bank alljawall,
4, 18811.
Bank al Montreat, Bank .at
We ~ot know whet
Naw
York, Bank at Nova
llee ahet1d frolll plulng'
Bootie, BanMia Truat Com.
day,
pany Banque Parlbaa, CanWhit ctuangae Goclla
Ira!
Tril•t Compeny, N.A., ·
planning
ChaMManhailan Bank, N.A.,
In Hla wtae •d laYing
Wayl,

,

W• Clllnolltnow the
~ftl

......

.

Ho allowa both loY ..d

Why .we muallooo the
precioua on•
We've aharlahad thraugh
they--.
We eo~nnot know- but ' ·
And' --~~
lalth- halp ua
..

"But it's clear that even when
the vaccine does not protect from
disease, it protects from serious
complications and even death,''
said Nancy Cox, chief of influenza
for the CDC.
Every January, scientists with
the CDC and U.S. Food and Drug
Administration put their heads
together to brew a vaccine. They
p.ull out all the data on which
strains domina1ed that year and
which strain was the last to appear•
But because the flu season
dliesn 't end until ' March, there's
always a chalice new strains will
emerge after the scientists begin to
grow the virus, which they use to
~ix up the vaccine.

Our way to tb01e

..........

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ua
of lllnd.

Very Ndfy miMed by

dauah•"

wile, Halma;
· Lane Clarlt, Citrolyn
Roe• .,d JoAnn White;

- . . ... ··. . . . . _of_
-

In Loving Memory
Of My Wife,

our ..,._._..tlflon to

· tM NIIIIYM, frlencll,

~·::..""'.::t

..I
T'

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)

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- ... . . . _.......
........ ':' ...

UNit MICE CONTRACT

Center. Mar

r.olllved at the Dlllce of the
Dtractor of the Ohla
Department of Tra...
portaUon, Columbua, Ohio,
until 10:00 A.M., Ohio
Sta'ndard nme, TuMclay,
Octobef 15, Ult2,
. . tor lm_
.-

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, , .. ~,...~
...
••

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''"-" •• l'"'' .. .,..,., • ··-- ·-·
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wanted to Buy

Boob: Book•: Bookl: UNd
and RaN, Bought •nd .Sold.
Theophlh•, Box 731, Gallipolis,
Ohio 4541SI. 814-440:.7282 6·
lOP.II.
Oon'l Junk Ht Sell Ut Your Non·
Working
Major Applllnc..,
Color
TV's,
Aefrlgtralorl,

Fr•ur1, VCR't, Mlcrowavta,
Air, CondiUoner., Guitar Ampt, ..
Etc. 614-:11'6-1238.

·Wantld jltandlng tlmbtr, t~p
prfc•• ptld, · fr• eatlmst11,

llconood towing
8li5-30SS.

company, 34M-

Wlnted To Buy: Junk Autos
Wllh Or Wllhout Motoro. ·eon

lorry Uvoly. 614-398-9303 .

Top Prlcao Pold: AU Old 'u.s.

COina, Gold Alng!J Sliver Colna,
Gold Colnt. M.T.::t. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Galllpollt,
Would

Uko To Buy Non Working

WI-. &amp; Drv-ro, o.e., HorIIOint, lll)'log WP Sooro Only

..., Col. 814-44&amp;-2114-4.

Employment Services

Loaal~':'~ .

A lpeelal thl'*l IO tho

bora,

'.

9

Cc+= .....,. ,Ohio .

- · ............ 1111 , ....
lrwlloloaoef _ _ _

-loll

Giveaway

s.rmbar ll,lllll2

,._

~w: trul, .........
Few ..................
to llntL
A .,_.flllllllhllto.,and,
... clad end ... lived,

4

NOTICE TO CONTRACTOR!!
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTIIENT OF
lRANBPORTAnDN

notg- tor thl ftowara,

aona-IIHIW, ..,.,....

:a'

Public Notice

Public Notice

"

SPONAGEL.

. &amp;olllorrow•
That wUI bring peaoe

And
"",..,_
........

1 ' card ·of Thanks

In Memory

KATHRYN

lind

Public Notice

•

B. Paid Circulation:
Cldbank, N.A., C 18/Sovron,
1.
Solea through Dealera
Conneotlcul National Bank, onll Canlaro,
Str..C Vondora
Credit . Lyonnal1, Creotar and Counter Sites:
11,006.
Bani!, Firat National Bank at
2.
Mall
Subacrlptiont:
886.
Chloago, Flral Union Nadonat
·C. Total Paid.Circulation•
Bank Of North Carolina, In· 11,992.
'..
duatrlol Bank ot Japan, LTCB
D.
Free
Dlatribudon by .
Truat Company, Mellon Bank, Matt Carrier or
Other Moone,
Mltaublahl Truil &amp; Banking . Samplei, Complimentary,
Corporation, National Waat• and Other FrM Coplu: 13B.
mlnall!r Bank USA, NCNB
E. Total Dlotrlbutlon:
Taua National Bank, Nippon 12,130.
.Giedlt Bank, Ltd., PhllilclelF.Coplea Nol Dlolrlbutad:
ph.. National Bank, Royal
1. Office Uoe Laff Over,
llank of Canada, Sakura Unaccounted, Spoiled Alter
Bank, Ltd. ' (tormarty Mltaul ·Printing: 574..
'
Taiyo Kobe Bank, Ltd.), S.
2. Return• from Newo
curtty Pacltlc National Bank, A111111ta: 1,0541.
South Carolina Notional
G. Total: 13,700.
Bank, Sutnllomq Bank, Ud.,
Actual ~ No. Ccple• ot
Tallal Bank, Lid., Toronto-Do- Single tuue Publlahed Near·
minion lank, Union· Bank, eat to Filing Data:
.
·Waohovta Bank &amp; Truot
10. Extant ond natura al
Company, N.A., Aetna Ute Circulation.
lnauranoe Company, CIGNA
A. Total No. Coplea
tn--ta, Inc., The Equl- Printed: 13,700.
,
lablllute Anuranae Ia ' 1y
B. Paid Circulation:
of lhl U.S.. IDS Ute lnaursa!H through Deetara
ance Company, John Han- and1.Carrlarl,
SlrMt Vondor1
oaok Mutllat Ute tnaurance and Counter Salet: 11,361.
Company, Ma~aachuaatta
2.Mai!Bub...-lpdont:822.
.Mutual Ute tnaul'lnce Corn.
C.
pany,MorganGuarantyTruot 12,183.Total Paid Circulation:
Company ol Haw York, ND. F- Dlalrlbution by
Yarlt Ute lnaurance Com· Malt t:anlar or Othar Meano,
pany, Tho Northwoatorn $1mplea, compllmantiry,
Mutual Ute lnauranca Corn- .and ·Other FrM Coplee: 137.
pany, Tho Prudentllll lnour- . ; ·E. Tolal Dlotrlbutlon:
anoe Company. of America, 12, 320
Taaehar'o lnauranoe &amp; An- . F. Copteo Not Dtatrlbuted:
nutty Aaoodatlon of Am•· · 1. Olftca Uoe Loft Ovar,
.loa, The Tra-r1 lnaurance UJU~ccaunted, Spoiled Alter
Company.
. ·
Printing: 457.
•
Av.,..goNa. Copl" Each
2. Return• from New•
I
!laue ~ring Preceding 12 Agontl! 923.
.
MC!nthl.
G..Total: 13,700.
Announcements
10. E1111111 and natura of
1. C.riJty that tho alit•
mMtamocfobymeaboveare 3' Announcemems
No · . Coploa correct
·
and complete.
Printed: 13,700.
·
Robart Wln~ott,
TALK TO CANOY LIVE
Publlaher
1-1100-eao-44115, 125/Coll
Crown Com. BoCa FL, 11 +
Ocl. 4,1992

flee of Publication: 825 Third

Romuur l A. F.

m:= I:IJIPDI. theirs.
(.lltM 21..Julr 22) Da. nol at..... .I a pry intormlltiOn today from .
••mttlll w110 · ~a . retuctlnl to dtaeuat
mallltS el I 1111!1111111 MIUN.· ln. dU,·
tltllt. fllllnCINldull might deoiCie 10 tall

, _ ....... I JL . , letl_,.
may ~I$ all on you tod8jr end lak you
t o - - 8011..... you'd rathar not
dO. . . lorllwtgllt In your
rathar
thin r 111 1t1u1 In your COl
•
.
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Public Notice

Trua- WWIIc!garC•...._,
.One Raoklngltam Rd., a -

c:

.

In Memory

2

1

.

Public Notice ·

• Public Notice

. . lrtanda tad8y. Tllay might not
be b...
In~ ...... thai die-

-

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.
because their·lives an: more satis,
fying, or the other way around,''
Greeley said. "I'm not trying to
explain the flow. I'm ~ust trying 10
show what's going on.' .
Greeley is a sociology professor
at the University of Chicago and
the University of Arizona, and .a
research associate at UC's National
Opinion Research Center. He has
written more than 100 books,
including 24 novels.·
· Pan of the data for his latest
report i:aine from the center's
nationwide surveys of 4,424 people
conducted from 1988 to 1991. The
other part came frorn Gallup polls
of 1,314 respilndents analyzed previously in a 1990 study by Greeley.
He said .he was prompted to
write a new paper on the IOpic by

gang fight between inmates in S!JR Paulo state secunty department
Latin Ameria's largest prisan has duector, told a news conference
left 111 prisoners dead a'nd injured Saturday afternoon.
.
34 riot troops officials said Satur·
De Campo said 300 riot troops
day.
'
were sent in to quell the outbreak at
The fight, which began about ~be prison, _whit:h houses 7,500
4:30 p.m. Friday and ended early IRIIIates but IS bwlt to hold 4,000.
today at the Carandiru Penitentiary, He ~d the fighl was ended Friclay
-- was touched off when-rival factions evenmg,
started fighting in 1\ recreation area.
Earlier_~ports said the uprising
officials said.
lasted unUI early today.
The melee spread quickly to the .
The prison was in a l~kdown
inside to the prison cells, where Saturday afte.rnoon_. w1th all
~ inmates grabbed homemade lcnives, mmates ~ept m the1r cells, de
pipes and seized _nine guns from Campo said.

. . . . you-

'

. ·
·
·
·
·
· CIDCAGO (AP) - The happi- ·
est men lllld·women in America are
masried CO!Iples who have sex fre.
quently after age 60, says a report
by the Rev. Andrew M. Greeley,
the sociologist-priest-novelist ·
Thiny-seven pereent of married'
people over 60 make love once a
week or more, and 16 percent make
love seveml times a week, Greeley
noted in his repon, based on two
previous surveys involving a total .
of 5,738 .subjects.
Nine out of 10 of those over 60
who made love at least once a ·
w~ said their spouses were "very
attractive phystcally,'' said the ·
report..
Men and women who engage in
frequent sex after 60 report the
happiest marriages and are more

·son·
ri•ot
leaves
111
dead
Pe
A guards, Pedro Franco de Campo,
. ·Ao PAULO, Brazil

lnlleedaf~

.

Relief officials fear Bosnia's
traditionally harsh 'winter could

~~;l~n~~~th~~:rJj_living :::ati;~~r~~~~~:::e;~h

'-Your
,'Birthday

county ProseJr. The state did TAURUS (April Ill 1111; Ill) Naw ..,.
dea-a you Undertake at IIIII lime '
lhpuld be aucc.llul, pnwlded you ....,
on
.
tor guklanee. c-

aasauJI CliO inYI)IVillg
' &gt;:ear-old girl• .

Pags

I

.Judge ends
·bench'

second U.S. aircraft to divert to the
Croatian capital, Zagreb, on two

·
·
S. ex and. happi•ness
.
.g·O .b'
. a. nd
• J•n
• d coup Ies
.hand
.
fi0 r 0 lder. marrie

to

on

Sentinel

iiona1 aiilift would resume after a sep81'8le, imsuccessful Jttempts to claim hundreds of thousands of mently rejected the proposed flight
month-longiiiiS)lOOSion.
I
.deliver supplies, U.N. officials at · lives witbol!t adequate supplies of prohibition.
Bad weather, however, forced a Zagreb airport~food, fuel and materials to repair
"Whoever accer,ts tjle air space

·. SARAJEVO, Bbsnia-Herzcgovana (A~) - ~n American plane
!&amp;nded m Sarajevo Saturday, bring·
mg ~adly needed food and the
prom1se that a fuU-Iledged intenta·

SUNDAY PUZZLER-

~ 37 years

Sunday 11m••

First relief plane lands in Sarajevo

what use_ can be.m~~e of credit
information. It's a farestorm as
~ore and III"!C ~Ie are s~J!fac­
mgandcheckiilgll, .Sweet said.
Cliff Arnebeck, former CoiUIJ!·
"!U area~ for ~-SaJd
h1s cred1t records were oBtained
widlout II!' ~iss~ in~- .
He wd a P!lvate mvesuga~ng
ag~ncy \¥IS hued .by a. law fum
p111d by Pa1lt and listed m a repon
to the Federal Elections Coinmis- .
sion as ,having been pa.id about
$60.000 for legal services.
A.r.ncbeck said he has been
askliil to .meet in Washington on
Monday with the _staff pf a Hopse
Ban kin(! s11 bcommitiee that is
looking mro the adequacy of credit
reporting laws.

the '!'vice of c~nsol, the Perot
Petit1on Committee ongaJed a
cornJIIIIY 10 provide. in c:awn circWIIIIInces,laVii:es tlui the Scaet
Service would provide to an
~ presidential candidale."
she said. "We ~ve been'!?"":"·
ly asaun:d tblt ID COIIIIeCUon With
.
thole service~ there wae neither
illegal c:n:dit checks or any other
~
'J .
• ill'
illegalactivityoranylort."
.
·
liM«,IBid he may have more 10
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ Diar- · 325 10 425· die per Yllllf ~ almost
MQSt deaths oCcur among JX&gt;i!r should visit a doctor or hospital, say next week.
rhea kills hundreds o.f American 10 percent of preventable U.S. blacks, Hispanics and Amencala but later' visits can be avoided if
"We came up with one glaring
babies each year and puts 220,000 infant deaths, according to a I~I Indians, 'S111toslwn said.
doctors.teach parents how to use · ...........t misuse by a pn'varc invesin hospitals because doctors don't study by the national Centers for
. SaniOSham said a child suffering ota1 rehydration liquids.
iT[aiio~ firm in New York. The
recommend a simple, inexpensive Disease Con110!.
a first bout of severe diarrhea
Many doctors fall to usc oral Fair Credit Reportina Act is the
treabneilt that has saved millions in
rehydratioo therapy in the hospital conuolling legislation, and it says
~
10 teach parents to do so at
ThirdWorldcountries: expenssay.
· Most of the deaths and hospitalJ.;.- s
· and
home because they find it easier to
izations could be prevented if par·
.
provide fluids intrav.enously
ents were taught 10 give tl]eir sick
NEW LEXCNGTON, Ohio (AP) - A former deputy and sumdespite the much higher cost, said
children a specially formulated
mer wodcer have accused the Pmy County sheriff ofseiual harassDr. Frank Sinatra. headtof pediatric
sugar-and-salt solution, pediatri ,
ment
gastroenterology at Los Angeles
·'·
cians said Friday during a seminar
The suit was tiled against ~heriff Danny Dixon earlier this week
County-University of Southern
at the University of California-Los
in u:s. District Court in Columbus.
California Medical Center. He is no
Angeles School of Medicine.
. Dixon did not ~tum a message left after 5 p.m: Friday at the
relation to the singer.
"Pe&lt;iple in the United States
sheriff's Office. His home pbone number WU DOt listed. · .
Also, many insurance companeed 10 realize that although diar· Former deputy Rhonda Flulwty said ~Y Dixon fondled her
!lies pay for ho~pitalization and .
rhea may be a very simple disease,
when wiring bet for undercover work. Tlie suit also clai~ he
mtravenous flinds, but not for
threatened to fu-e her if she n:flll!'d to see him socially while he sent
home use or oral rehydration fluids.
a child can become dehydrated
very quic~ly and can die within
. her husband, Deputy Sheriff Frank Fluharty, out oftown for trainThe cost.or U.S. childhood diar·
hours," said Dr. Mathuram San~
ing.'
·
·
·
rhea is abotat $1.25 billion annualtosham, professor of international
Summer empleyee Jodi Lewis said the sherili urged her 10 go on
ly: $560 millidh for hospitalii.ation
health arid pediatrics at Johns Hopboating trips with him on the condition that she wear a bikiili. He
and $690 million for an estimated
Children who rub their eyes, are slow readers, do pc19rly In·
allegedly told her notro teU anyone about iL
.
2.1 miUionto 3.7 million visits 10
: kins University in Baltimore.
school or complain ·or headaches may have a vision
Many parents wrongly believe
doctors' offices, Santosham said. ·
problem. They ahoUid have a thorough vision eX.mlnatiOn
clear liquids such as soda pop, fruit
LANCASTER, Ohio (AP) - A Fairfield County grand jury on
To combat the problem, the Oral
'Friday indicted 1he former health commissioner on one count each
Rehydration Therapy Project _ 8
· juice, sports drinks or liquid gelatin
by a vision specialist. It your child has any of these
. should 00 given to children sufferof aggravated theft, perjury and falsification, the cOiii'lty prosecutor
coalition of pediatric and public
symptoms, phone Dr. BaliN for an appointment today:
' ing diarrhea, Santosham said.
said.
·
health groups- is campaigning to
.
DR. A. JACKSON BAILES, Optometrist
Those liquids contain too much
An arrest warrant has been issued for Mary Turney, accused of
educate parents, doctors and other
.
446-3300 .
sugar and too little sodium. potassiowing the county SI58,0QO in salaries and benefits, Prosecutor
health workers. about the simple
250 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH.
urn and chloride salts and can
David Landefeld said. ·
.
treaunent. .The project is funded by
·. aggravate diarrhea, he said! . .
II\. December, Ms. Tumey resiiJied as health commissioner as
a drug company that makes ORT
or ·
. Over-the-counw anu-dtarrhea
questions about her coUege record arose. She said sh~ had a massolutions. Friday's seminar was
992·3279
ter's degree from the University or California at Berkeley, bUt·the
one of many sponsored by the pro·.. medicines shouldn'rbe given to
110 Mechanic Street, Pomero , OH.
children because-they can worsen
scboolcouldn'tfind~fshcaueltded.
·
jecL
the problem b_y traJ?ping diarrhea·
The state auditor s offiCe coriCluded in April that Ms. Turney
causing organ1sms m 1he gut, SaJd .
held the post without having the needed degree as required by 'Ohio
Dr. Marvin Ament, UCLA's chief
law.
·'
of pediatric gastroenterology.
She then sold her Licking CountY farm and couldn't be located.
The special sugar-and-salt oral
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - GFS ChemicalS, Inc., has agreed 10
··. rehydration fluids are available in
pay
a ~50,000 penalty for~ violations of the Clean Water Act,
·many drug.and grocery srores for
an
envlfOIIIIIentallfOOP
said Friday, _
· ·
$3 to $5 per liter, a little more than
.See Answer Puzzle·on Page A-2.
As
)1011
of
the
agreement,
$40,000
or
the
penalty:
is going to the
, a quan. Commlin brands are Pedicity of Columbus to help moniaor discharges into the sewers, said
alyte, Ricelyte and Oralyte.
160 Trials
~CRoSS
82 Sketches aa a
Island
.
They cail be pUrchaSed without . the National Environmental Law Center.
model
74
At
home
1_
Narrow
strips
The company runs a plant which poduces ~t~ chemicals. •
DOWN
a prescription, although a prescrip.
84
Mend
76
Equally
A message left Friday night seeking cornment was not' munediately
ot wood
' lion is needed to obtain reimburse·88 Sarcaan\
· 1 Fall into disuse
77 Conflagrations
returned.
·
·
6 Fish eallce
~ ment in the 18 states where Medi87 Sham
2 Darla
7a Mimic
The Ohio Public Interest Research Group flied a eomplliint in
10 Batt of thread
~ caid pays the COSL ·
89 Devoured
3 Three-pronged
83
Title of respect
14 Out ot date
1989 in federal district court in Columbus saying the company t1is"If treated 'properly with oral
92 Burst forth
spear
85
Yearly
19 Out-and-&lt;lUt
charged wastewater that ~eeeded lil!lits for lead, copper, nicltel and
rehydration· fluids, there sho_uld ~
95 Tears
4
Cut
ot
meat
21
Philippine
knife
88
Fireplace part
mercury.
.
.
no deaths due to dtarrhea. 10 th1s
98- colored
5 Projecting tooth
22
Slietha
~
87 Support
"We are-pleased that GFS has demonsttated full compliance
country," Santosluim said.
6 Hebrew month
gl- '
23 Strike out
' ~
88 Dissolute person
Dehydration from diarrhea is a · with the Clean Water Act for more than a year since we announced
99 Neither masculine
7 Cut oH
24 Chief; principal,
our
intent
to
sue."
said
John
Rumpler
or
the
Ohio
PIRO:
89 Near
B.TV actor Jack" major kiUer or children in the Third
nor feminine
26 Separating
90s-&amp;w
World, once claiming 4.6 million
9 Crown
101 Fixed portion
28 Colonl91 Mistake
10
Brittle
:_ lives annually, San10$am said. But
103 PortiCO
29 Turf
11
Path
92 BaSeball stat
: in receni years, oral rehydration
104 Door sign
30 "The - Earth"
into
a
parlneishlp
that
eQUid
have
far12roll
~ therapy has saved I million lives ·
ASTRO-GRAPH
105 Hot cross 93 "A·- !n the Sun"
32- code
reaching llf!d beneflcill elfacts. The
13
The.two Of US
106
Healtatlcin
sound
' each year, ·acc.ording 10 the United
94 Guido'• tow note
,
33
Beau
and
Jell.
foundation lor the alllence wtU be eatab-14 Fondles
107
Irving
ID
" Nations Children's Fund.
96 Porlat
.tllhed on mutual neecla.
· to Lloyd
15 in muatc, high
108
Walked
on
'
· Viruses, bacteria and parasites
VIII~ (Alii- ZI-SepL 22) II behooves
97 Surfeit
.34 Hawaiian wreath
16 Actor Peter 110
Drunkard
you
to
take
pooltive
maaauree
at
this
• cause diarrhea in about 16.5 mil,
1
.
00 .Michael Landon
BERNICE
35 PilCher
17 Guides
time tn regard to thlngo that could pro111
HebreW
Jetter
lion American children each year.
Twist
TV movie
18 Uncanny
112 Accomplishment
BEDE OSOL 1 .tcle .you wtth more material aecurll)l. 37
Some 220,000 are hospitalized and
39 Short aleep .
102
Ark builder
Waya can be found · to gratify your
'
20
Jog
113 Pack away
40 StitcheS
105
Leather str~p
elforta.
23
Lairs
115 Yea, to Carlos
41 Withered
109
A Barrymore
25
":Show
of
117 Equals three feet .
42 Barbet·shop
Oct. 5, 1llll2
112
Simpleton
Shows"
119 Concerning
souncj
-~
113 Quarrel
27 Bartered ·
120 Take a vote
Prudent management of your material
44 Created 1a
121
Surgical
28 Seeds
114 Gave prior notice
affairs Is eaoantlal In the year ahead. II
diSturbance
31
Faucet
casually
procedure
116 Jot
you utilize oenalble methods, a slow but
46 s-t edible fruit
33Sow
124 Pay attention
118 Lifeless
sura gr-h pattern Ia Indicated.
47 "The Eyes of
360cho126 Btemllh
LIIIIA (lepl. 23-0cl. 23) Unbecoming
120 Serving dish
Laura-"
38 Midday
conduct on the playing lleld today could
127 Sandarac tree
121 Native metals
40 From - to stern
get you labeled ~&amp; . poor sport It you . 48 Slave
12ti L881ed
122 Mental strain
41 Sinks In middle
Oct. 4. 1llll2
.Jind yourMI! behind, act as graciously
50 Signified
CCNCCNNATI (AP) ...:..A judge
130 H..t
123 One loliowlng
aa you WOIM If y!)U were ahead. Major
52 Ugly old women .
43 Pallet · ·
who retired after 37 years on the
132 Repast
125 Frocks "
bench says he still thinks there are Two old endeavors might be reJuvenat· changao .,. - d tor Libra In the com45
Bodies
of
soldiers
53 King ID' '
133 Food program
126
Chastise
better alternatives than 1'ail for ed In ihe year ahead, $)Wing to·an un- Ing year. Send tor Libra's Aatro-Graph ·55 Strike
46
Decorates
134 Hostelry
usual chain of events that could make predlctlona today. Mall $1.25. plus a
127
River. Islands
57
Japanese
drama
47
Indefinite
number
135 Cutting tools
:• many of the people who get in them timely and profitable.
tong, Mll-addrated, stamped enve58
Fate
·
129
Loved
one
49
Retulie
137 Profound
triluble.
. . LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You should be lope to Aatro-G(aph, c/o this newspa59
Shallow
vesSels
51
Memoranda
131
Simplest
139 Mr. Carney
Gill!ert Bettman, 75, retired a more active parliclpant In a venture per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH
60 Btisaafl 10
52 Mal Gibllcin film
132 Swamp
· 140 River ;,tends
Wednesday as a Hamilton County you're involved In wtth othal's. Don't 4&lt;1101-3-428. Be sure to state your zodl·
53
Parcel
ot
ground
62
Conducted
,
ac
atan.,
141 Lock ot hair
133 -lrae
Common Pleas Court judge. His leave the management of this affair en•
54 Military cap
84 Italian currency
areer since 1956 also iilcluded ser- lireiy up to them. Libra, 1111111 yourlllllf to ICOIIPIO (Oct. 14-Nov. 22) You can
143 Makaa lace
134 Angry
C.
•
,.
a birlhday gilt. Sand lor Ubr&lt;1'a Aalro- accompllah what you eat out to do to86 River In Slbetia
56 Bush ar Reagllfl.
146 Sign ot a hit:
138 Stalk
VICC on the ~unic_ipal_ -,oun and on Graph predictiilna tor the year ahead by . day, ~you •1111'1 contemplattng.
86 ROOifvelt ID
.
e.g
.
.
abbr.
138 Stations
the 1st Oh10 D1stnct Court of mailing $1.25 plus a· long, . Mil-eel- taking lillY -Y outa. . Important
69 Military unit
59 Pillaging
146 ·Baby's playthings
140 Charll)l
- Aooeals.
dressed, stamped envelope to Aalro- achl.,._.ta muat be earned,
70 Fish eggs
• 60Rip•
148
Fawn•
upon
; • Some cntics had desCribed him Graph, c/o this riewtp-. P.O.-Boil . IAIIITTAIIIUI (llo¥. :a-o.c.· 21) Al141 Hu~
71 Middle East grp.
61 v....
as a liberal on sentencings in con- 91428, Cleveland, OH 4&lt;1101·3-428. a. thougll you might be tempted to do the
150. ~·
.
142
Withered
73
Cooking
formula
' namesakes
152 Emlla vapor
oppoalte, 11'1 beat you don't tpeak
servative Hamilton County. But sure to state your zodiac atgn:
144
Blemish
75
Gloaey
paiot
63 "Mommle - " . ·
1~3 "-In Space"'
said Friday that descrip- . SCORPIO (Oct. 2• Nov. Zl) Aattuallon about otherl today unleal you have
77 Ftowerl881 plant
147
Youngster
,. B, etiman
..
. .
.
that has had a restriCtive affect upon IOI'IIelhlng nice to eay. .
· 85 Genua of maples
164 Spoken
78 Crown ·
uon IS meanmgless. .. .
yo~ should begin ·to · diminish loday: CAI'IIICORN (Dec. ZI..Jan. 11) Beware
148 Alaa
87The-G- '
156 Unpretentious
"If you ask me do I favor This wilt help elevate something abOut ot a tendeo~ toward being stingy today
80 JudgiTIBnt
149 Proverb
69 Early morn
157 Aocka
throwing the book at every poor which you've been worried. ·
with your pe 11 nai')fll, especially when
81 Military draft
151 Poem
70
Temporary
rutara
158 Sit lor portrait
slob who came before me, the.. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23--llec 21) eon- deallrig wtth individuals who've t11111ted
agcy.
72
Mediterranean
159 Ell
153 -, M, N, 0 , . .
answer is no " he said. "I eonsid- dltlona In ~eneraltool&lt; rather hopeful lor you generoualy.
•
185 Army oft.
•
· · ·1 lasl
. '
you today, prbvlded you deal with mat- AQUUIUI (JeoL .,.,..... 11). You are
. er~,J:U a
~
.
ters In a proctlcat and reoponllbltl r.h- notiNI IDr your objectivtl)l and lalmeaa,
1 m not _talkin&amp;. about rap1sts, ion. Be duty-wns(;loua.
but .-ay you might aurpriM thoM
·• murders, senous a§saults. But 99 CAPfltCOIIN (Dec. ZW..111 Allgnlllnwohed with by keeping ,._
' percent of all this stuff is stealing, icant but dlfftcult ObjeCIIW can be
· messing around with drugs, and achieved today- If you make Ha ptter. =:::~Milch 211) Unlortu· those are social problems, real)v.
.11)11118Ue. It parlaina to your ttatue lild nat-'!&gt;. you .might ftnd n dllftcull to.c:oa-· · .
CUll yoour II 111 IQI today with 110111e0M
"I try to find
an
altemau'
e
I
mat~~rlal well-being.
..
·1
Y
~
AQUARIUS (.ian. -.11) You mlglll who Ia·llncei al)' lnt.,-eated in your wei·
can, ~nd always ~ave, to )USt makaaomerevlslonsatthlttll'l\elnvotY- fare and could help u only you could exthrowmg somebody m the ·pemten- In~ your blueprint lot' the future. The un- pr- your need1.
tiary. lt COsts you and me $25,000 a worl&lt;able will be discarded and ,...· ARIII (........ 21·Aprtt 1l)lt'a Imporyear."
·.
. ·
,
. placed by ~ns you've learned from tant tod8y lhat you.do not put lOCi much
atoctc In the opintona at negative
. He .said drug rehabilitation pro- experlarlce.
grams and prisoner labor or train- PISCES (Fell. 20-Marcll Ill) A matll!r trlentla. There'• a atrong fiOialbllty they
·
~ ·
bet d · you were once·hopeful ot lhould no1 be ~ ~~~t•vlnce you that you can't do
mg pro~ 0 ten an: ter eter· relinquished, evan though 11 haln't gl¥- aatMIIdng you raatly Clll.
rents than jail. . ·
en you -muc:h to c"- about 18111y. 1 TAl I CAPri• IIIIJ 211)1f you make
BctlmiD paidcd over the 1976 Changes are tn the oiling that COliN 811 - . . to lmlle 111 your own llllatakea
, trial at which Cincinnati's police make you 111111e again.
.
~• ....,. wllliugh with you, no1 at ·
cllillf, Carl v. Ooodin. was
AlliES (llarcll 21-Apott 111 Upon ,... you. Dlll'l l8ke younatt too Mrlaully.
. _ . , . , . . . . , . . eelec:tlve •
: ed of perjury
A view, a situation you•,. baM e~ue~y~ne •
· · lite
threw out the looktllkattc:anber..,t.oec~lheWIII'you · I Ill • Q tile taplca y o u - Ia dil-

Pomeroy--Middltport-Galllpolll, OH

''

· · ·--r·" ~.

. .'

tlea~propoulawlUH

..

· ~

•'
:
.. ,......'
.

FIN to aood ._,, I. woak old
gol'blla. f04-488-t8INI.
o'L~ Whha Flulfv Malo Cot,
7
Old Wall . ~ .... For,
N - Homo. il14-371-2591.
'

r ... ·•·- ,,_ ....

~

••• , ....... . ...... ,_...
1,. ' ·'
'

. .., ..

'

,.

.

�...
•

-

,•

11mee

11

Help wanted

Sentinel

OH
Real Esi,Jte

Fmanc1al

31

992~110

full.l'lmo Offlco Pooltlom Com·

Grant Guide To Frn
Olva Away• Available
2«1, clo GaUipotlo DillY " America. litcludlng The Al1s,
-L~Illtlrd Av•nu•, Ga~ EduceUonel, Support, Welfare,
Mtclc•l, Femlly Or Fraternal,
llpollo, unoo 4583t

·

evening• for apPt., 54'

High St.. Mlddltport, Ohio.

Groetr)' Store tor Sill or pos·

. olblo Loose ' 4,000 oq.

8aart $7.30 Mour, Your Aru. No

Exporlonco Nec-ory. Muot Bo
11. For Info Coli 1-.&amp;2o.8633,
Ext. 6432, I A.M. To e P.M., 7
Doye. t12.15 Phono flo.
Jmmec:Ualt Opening For, Full·
11mo Aft 32 To ~ Houro Por
~,.t.rrtd

WM.

Long Term

Coro Arid liDS Exporlonco.
Banelh Paekage lnt_.cf' With
Compotltlvo WagH A~d Oil•

....,_till With E.xJM!Orltnce, Equ1l

· Opportunltr ·Employor. Plel..
Cont.lct Tho Dlroctor Of Nurs·

ft~

full

biMmlnl, paved parking. ::.am•
lodllon tor over. 30 y'1ars. Want
to .•nJoy our rellrement. Mason
CoUnty. 304-t82-3300 or Sunday• 304·882-2211. 'Ask for

Main St. Pt. Plea..nt, W. Va.
Completely R•noveted: 2 Full

Local Pay·Phone Rout1. Bring In

$1000 Wookly. Must Soli 1·800·
221!·9999.

Loeat' Sneck JSode Routt For

S.Oio. Eom St,ooo Weekly. 1·800·
375aVtnd Ext. S .

PIMCriiM Care Ctnltr, 110
Plnecmt .Drlvt, Glllipolls, OhiO:
4!1631, 61-6-7112.

Morrioono Food Sorvlco 'At Tho
UniVer~lly

ot Rio Grandit II

l.oc&gt;lolna For A Working Nlaht
!lupotvloor For Our Snock for.
Exporlonco With Foil Food And
Suporvloory Sklllo Noodod. You

Would Work Sundey, Morld1y,

Wodnoodor And Thurodoy 3:30
P.M. To 11 :30 P.M. And Tuoldoy
5 P.M. Till 2:30 A.l,t. · Good
Bonetno. Apply At Tho Food

Service Oftlce, Rhodn Slud1nl
Cent1r, University Of Rio
Grandi. Apply BtlwHn Th1
Houra 01 1:30 To 4:00 P.M. No
Phone C1lll PINII, Equ81 Op-

Business
Opportunity

814-388-1111 Bofore 2 P,M.

PARK RANGERS

Cllime

W1rd1n1,

Security

Malnt101nc•• Etc. No Eap.
N-ry. ••r Info Coil 2111lllf.IMI Ell. 8710 8 A.M. To 8
P.M. 7Dip.
Port·Timo Socrwtory For An
Cont•, Typing, Fltlng, Word Por·

.·,....
~­

...
~·

O...r 93% &lt;i lmtei.l!ltlcl5
ard peq&gt;le need security. i'la&gt; I
issi ... ardalb1lable.lh:h·

:~:=:t~~

Penon toperoonsales In a
dynamic network marktilng
Df:ul. r&lt;&gt; inl'erlay ~liS
Fir1f cbss marketing and

WOLFF TANNING BEDS

Ntw Commarclal, Hom• Unlls,
From $'199.00. _Lamps, l.otlons,
Acc1ssorles. Mont/lly Payments

Low As $18.00, Coli Today FREE
NEW Color Catalog. 1-800.2,?8·

lr:1JnlngStflPOfl.

Call now b ooruk:

829~.

(614 441·0441
5

HappyAds

WHO SAYS
FIFTY IS NIFTY?

feet, 6 OrNfl~ Vl•torl. S.nd

Reeumt l Aeler1ncn To: CLA

237 c/o Golllpotlo Dolly Tribuna,

Pomeroy
Huralhg
Ind.
FWallbllliatlon Center. Cunent
WO&lt;klood ol 2-3 houro por doy.

••

-

~•

roopond to: wtlllom Blot,

AdmlnillrMor, Pomeroy Nurslng

;_- ~.. CenterL.

31758

Homoclco Ia a I..., In
horne h•llltcara wllh
....ty 200 locatlona· In
42 • - · ~I acquloltlon MCI growth ......
crMiad exceptloNtl opportunltlea
In
our
G..llpolla ofllce:

Respiratory
Therapists
Appllcanta mual be.currWIUy
· crodendolec:l
(CRTT or RRT) with 14

y. . . ,.,.., ......lane..
•cellanl laachlnglltllla,
.Md . • good worldng
knowledge of all phaaM
of t'flplnttory lharlpy.
conaidtoratlon,

plea• aend your ,..

Pltyolcal T.h..Diot noodod for

::
••

HOME
HEALTH CARE

oume with ea!ary hlatory
. to: Homadcc1, Prolaellonal Starling, 275
CUrry Hollow Road,
Plttaburgh, PA 15231.

·: :: ~-=31::..·----~-­
~

RQplratary Therapy

For

825 Third Avenue, G111lpolls, OU

..,.

(614) 441.Q441

l)mnr .
.'
Opportunity Koocks

portunltr Emptoyoi.

NMCI Blbylilter In My Ho~;n1, Af.
ter School In VInton Aru.-Call

DO'ITIEHILL

O¥f'Mf.

~.

·

"ANT1QUE OR COUECTOR'B ITEMS"

lrilmodlolly. 614-446·2205.

21

HOMEDCO

Rocksprlngt

, •• Rood, ~-row, Oh 4576il. EEO
-"- Strdot Noodod a-h Rontol,
.,... Cotttoct: KoiJy At 114-«8-8772
;~ Orl14-412-7tft.

·,

14

....
...

Business
Training

-

~. :

-In

Reg.fl0.05.1274 .

•~ ,.

18

Wanted to

~,..

~... ·. Wll
eM
••

..

.

oo

IIW · Foft.
In Pll~ Area.
AeftrtncH

Avollablo. Rodnoy AroL Coif

''l' '

·~245-5117.

, ,
"'

Alt..-: S.OWing &amp; Mondlng,
114-148-41134. '

·

"•

Drummondo

Au!o. Body

'••

'
•
•
•

~

•'

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, Tooo Romovol, Hodgo
Trimming. Froo Eltlmotool 6143Q.1157 Aftor 4p.m.
Oeorgoo Portoblo S.Wrnlll, don~
hout ,..., loa• to tho mill juot
COII304-f"IS-1l57.

. JAYCI;E BLDG:, ~. MILE FROM ST. RT. 7 ON
35 BYPASS. BLUE BLDG.
CONSIGNMENT TAKEN ON DAY OF SALE
· FROM 8:00 AM TO I PM
•

~-: f14-«t.aa78 Aftor
~.u.

We are changing becau-. of ballgamn and
other actiYitiM on Friday nlgha..
New &amp; Uaed Merchlndlaa.
Early Conelgnmlflll C811317.o41&amp;
· Retreahm~nts Served
. C.M. Stanley, AI!CIIoneer, Llcenaa No. 5588 .
We have good clean merc~ndiM,
· Everyone Welcome.

.;. ,

~· ~~::'1'n ~~~:t~t.s~~:
llpotlo. Coli a1Hrv.21112.

32 Mobile Homes
fOr Sale
12f3 f'er Month lncludi111J tol
rtnt. New14'wlda mobile home, .
lnclud.n doUvory, comploto 111.
uP, oklrtlng &amp; otopo. 1-800·837·

PUBLIC AUOION

10:00 A.M. SATURDAY, OCT. 10, 1992

1625.

'.
'

RUTlAND LlGION HALL
BEECH GROVE RD.. RUTlAND, OHIO

, 1::.:

..

Real Estate General

• ·

Ma'nl Folrmont 2 Bedrooms,
· Hoo.·Hod Tondtr Loving Coro.
~~Ana A Muot s"
• &amp;14-:Ms nit!. : Loto Of Extroo,
•·
1m Llberly . 12150. Nowly
&gt; re-d, floo&lt;o, pontllng
ClfiiOI, 2 BR, "'""' &amp; Rll:
tuoo. 814-367·7434, •114·378·
2383. .

DlnictJOns from Pomeroy, Oh.: Tau SR 124
west to Rutland. Tum right onto BMch
Grove Rd., go approx. % mi. on left.· Sla1nsl
will be postad from SR 7.

1H1 lhulti 14170 s llodroom1
1 W Batho, 81+245-te27, etc:
441-3H7.
1112 WI- 14x70, 2 bod·
. , CIA;
totaltroatod
oloc, undtr·
ponnlfia.
11120
Wood
pon:h, -;120 Olumn owning &amp;
rolllng-11, o~orrthlng oxc
cond,- - · 30U7&amp;-514V.

I

.A

WEST

PHILLIP

ALDER

•u

ea5 s '

+KIH

spades.
West started with three rounds of
bearts. To South, thinp looked lmpossible. He had three top losers, and
surely one mlnor·suit fllteaM was
wrong. Yet he was used to adopting a
never·say·die attitude. Mentally placing both minor-suit kin ..
,.. ln East's
band: declarer ruffed the third heart
with !be .apade seven. He continued
with the spade king; West led a fourth

33. Fanns lor Sale
27 Acre Farm MOrt Or L-.11, 2

~me.

Stove,

2

Bod·

Renlals

Pais

Pau

z•

4e

Openlng lead: • K

·

'

3431.

.

•

•

eou """ 2:00 p.m.. 304·
5651, UaiiOft wv.

Col~1388.

Ono bo- opor1ment In
Pomeroy, part.llllly furnished, no
pliO, doj&gt;Ooft, 814-812.a&amp;n.

BRANCH OFFICE - 44HIOI
23 locuat St.
Galllpolll, Ohio 45631

FaD Reservatioas
Howlei•gMade
For laformatioa:

Good Location.
Call 992-6637 or
446-9786.

446-2206
9to 5

FOR RENT

ANSWERS T

Recently remo·
deled office space
for rent in

SCRAM*ETS
FOURTH
OSPREY
JUSTLY
MODERN
PILFER
IMPACT
SUFICIENT

Pomeroy. 1200 to
square feet
available.
Good location.
Call 992-6637 or •

The elder Congressman was chatting wit!J, a new colleague . "You can't
fool all the people all the time," he
stated, "bul a simple majority every
two year's is SUFFICIENT!"
"

Real Estate General

One bo.droom I(Mirtments, turnlahld,
uUihiM
II)Ciudtd.

S.curlly dopooh NqUirod, no
plio; 114..12-2218. .
, Three ·1 bedroom 1pl1 located

7th Strioot.L.for fllrtho.r lrtlomtl·
tlon·304-8 ....1440 uk for Lao.

Pomeroy, no plio, dopoolt, 11445

Furnished.
Rooms

Roome for rent • weik or monlh.
Storti:? ot $120/mo; Golllo H"'ol.
11'1 'I 1580.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Wood q?Ja{ty, Im ..
32 Locust Street, Galllpoii!S

Rentals

c.

. 41 Houses tor Rent
2 bedroom home Pl. PH, clou
to tchoola 6 Ito.,.., aend In: caulrM to Sox C-2D % Pit Pll.
:R~~.zoo Main St, Pt. Pit,

. .,

,

OFFICE 992·2886

. 2 llodroome, Mlddloport, Nlco

,

~hbomood,

446·1066

Allen
Wood, Raaltor/Brour •446 4523
Ken Morgan, R•lto~71
Moae Centetbury, R•ltor 448 3408
Jaanatte Moore, R•ltor-.258-1745
Tim Wetaon, Realtor 4 48 2027

..

I

NEW USTING, SPRING AVE. Is thio 4
bedroom, 1 bath, wood and brick ranch wilh
f~mily rriom, dining room, do~. full balam..,t,
f1raplace, and gat hot water hoat, butlar's
p~nlry, enclosed front porch,. baautiful bow
wtndow wlwiJtdow -~ and muclt mot11. Only
$32,000. Cali today. 11 won'l last tong a! that .
pnce.
1445

FARM ACREAGE - On Sla1a Roule 775.
Approximlile acllls are 30 ac"" pelltllll, 6 acr·
· es wood lot and 70 acres tillable. A fann pond
·and rural water It available. A latge bAm and
silo in good concition: Basic tobacco lllolmenl
lor 1992ls 14,660 pounds. The 1993 allotment
is
available. Make appointmenH Coma
the baautiful peoture land end com·
fialdlt aa flo
·
H72

•:. : • . iiiOiitit, 30W76-3812.

'&gt; StnoM
Fumlohod 3 Room Col·
togo In Golllpollot. Ctooo To
1
• •

,• .. COIWtnlencal,

....,.., t""
welaomt. 114-446-8224.1Ntw In·

NEW USTINCI - CITY SCIIIOCJLS
old bi-lovol with 3 bedrooms,
dining room and bath, lower laval.
bath; tillllly nn., and 2 car ~~&amp;raga,
central al• Aoldng only·$59,900.

Comer Lot, PW,

'·' • 0~ Full Booomont, 304-tl757oro.
.
• , 3 lodtoom H0&lt;110 In Rio
,: • Grsndo, Rood,: October 5th.
•• 114-381 H41.
; ' ~ 3 Mdroom, full betemtnt, Bur' •. Adcln ... a dop roqulrod:

I

NO

Pell,

•• . R........._ llopotth. 114-4411: . 2143.
: : ~ Small HouM For Rani, Upper

Toddler Care, 814-446-0227.

·• R- 7 North, DopooH

to do bobyohtlng In

BEECH· ST. ~ Approx. 24 acreo wilh a
beautiful two story colonial home overlooking
Pomeroy. Exacultve slylo home with fonnal
entry, family room wlfi,.place, formal dining
room, baaamanl has rec. room with Ilona
firaplaca, l~:l!"'und pool. 2 car garogo. Many
more amenities. Roduced Ia a low price of
$139,500.
H13

&amp;

·.. Reteeencae Required. 114-4413710.

&gt;.

'• • Th- bod_, houH for 10n~

r.. ••
Lincoln Helehlo:
.,. 1ftlf5pm.

614-fl:Z.7tl8v

CHESHIRE VILLAGE- is
you will find
fils opacioue, older two story home wllh 3 bed·
rooms, 1)I bath, lamily room, dining room,
beautiful slairciaa, nice level yard and more.
Only $49,500. _Callloday for mora lnlo.. 11467

I

·~•j • 1\oo bod,_, hou... porllw fur·
~ ~i·

,...

•

: .... ~ 4251.

TuRN YOUR FAMILY LOOSE HERE.... 4.49
aclllo, mil, with ffl&gt;lttage on naw SR 160 and ~ BEAU11RJU.Y MAINTAINED HOllE
old SR 180 at Porllr. ~r home oHers 4 BAS,
LOCATED AT CENTENARY - 3 BAt Ill
LR, dinette, kitchen, bam on property. ·
batho, .,..ipped ldlchan,' lR wlllona fi~-.
fllmlly nn., dining, I!ID bAtemWI~ 1llcar gorsgo
w/opelter.
·
,

.. • • 42
:·

•t: ~

! . PM.

,

•

-..·.-,
..
•,

Jennifer K. /oluuon
on NCeJvlng yo11r
d•l- .. a PeralegltL
We're proud of youl

Mom'
Ded, ~~~~~11
brothere •

•
•

loiiDOLEPORT- Thio opacloue 3 badtoom home 11 juot
whal the famtly neede.. It aloo hoe a latge living room,
nice size kitclten with cute little nook. Has new roof, new
wiring, and a new heal pump.
tz3,800 ·

H-•

HARRI~NVILLE - Mobile
Only - A 1884
~ua m~ homo. Comas with .,..lppad kltchtn plut
mtcro":av~, dllhRoher, front porch, · rear deck, and
Undtlptnntng. looko like NEW.
$15,0110

•

POMEROY -Lincoln Hlighta- Cuta ae a But!Dn, Neal
at a Pan .daecnbu thio two bAdroom home with an
equipped kilch.., ; carport, and part baaament. Has a
ftoorod attic and a 50X288 toL Waa $25,000.
NOW $20,0110

1880. PLANTZ ~UI!1[)fV~SioN
homo offers 3 BRs, 1IS
LR, kit., fuH J{uamont w/out.lida entry, carport, gas heat; cily
utiitias.
•
· ·

.

S!. RT. 124 - A baautilul BRICK RANCH, 3 bedroom I,
,{lr bath homo. Hea' lull ba~~t~tent and attached 2 car .
garago.
. JUIT $a,IOO

--.,.,··
..
·-·.
.
~

.~..~

.~ .

: ·~.

~·JI­

.:' '

On:tlae Bth
Yoa'U 'h 43, ·
But}..adaink
On 1M 26th
You'U beeOine
Mn. C.· .

.

CHESTER - lumnar ROIICI - A great IItie 'QIIIaway or
llartar home. Haa 3 bedroomo, 1 bath, fuel oil fumaca .
With approx. 34 ac,..,
$32,100
IIIQOLEPORT - Welnut StrMc - A; one atory horne In
town. lhl1 8 room, 2-3 bedn&gt;om home lila on 2 Iota and
hat a partial ba1811tont. Hao al new wiring llitd ~ util·
lias.
. •
$30,0110
TUIINER, lrokw........~ ....................... ll2~

""· REDUCED TO $411,80011 - BEAUTIFU~
COLONIAL STYLE HOME at Rio Gnondt\. 2.87
acllla mn, 3 BRa, 1IS balhs, LR, kilchon, FR.
Just ofl Pl....nt Velle{Ai!.

1578. JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - ADDfliOH
TWP. - 388 aclll lann, 3 pondt, tobacco bAu,
55X110 bam, w/conclllte noors, may consider
1895. MINI FARM - R11madaled holna plut 20
.
.
acru mil. MoaUy crop land. Houoe jhas 3 BRa, · .split.
balh, kitcllen, LR, beauliful deck." All for
tnl. 15 ACRES lin:. - Huntington lWp.
$45,000. Call Ruth' lormoredalails.
approx. 38 acllll crop, balance pultlre and
1141. OWNER HAS REDuCED TliE PRICEwoo&lt;te, 2 1101y home, 4 BRa, bAth, LR, kllchon,
WALK TO ALL THE HOME FOOTBALL.
concrete block bAm with loft, tobacco baN,
GAMES - Very nica home just a few blocka
frontage on Raccoon c-.
from downtown. 3 BRo, 1Yo bAths, LA, DR., gu
heal.
'
1512. 108 ACRES 11/l. Guyan Townlhlp.
:,
.
financing to qualiliod buyer with 20%
1150, CORNER LOTI- Very'nica home oflara · Owner
doW!1
payment.
• · ·
3 BRs, bath, ·kitchen, carp~t. fireplace, 1
detached ~~&amp;raga .
.
INVESTORS - 4-PLEX FOR iALE - Good
Income. Each unR hao 2 BRS, LR, kilchWI _,.j
ball\. Call for molll Information. ·

1142. $U,IIOOII - WHY PAY RENT- Ranch

1888. Ht,OOO- Charry Drive, edge o1
SR 180. Small home and .8Uia.;re mil.
~

.

Mobile Homes
tor Rent
.

. REMODELED ONE AND .OIE-HALF STORY HO~
- Located on State Roulo 7 at Euralca. 3 bedroome,
li'lirig room, dining room, kitcllan and bAih loealod on
32.9 aclllo miL CALL TO SEEII.
.

tamlly
deck. You need

PROPERTY LOCATED ON WOODSIDE ROAD - 2
mobHe..homet, one a 1976 Allan, ono bedroom, one
· 1973 Caetie, thrM bedroom~ on a 150'x455' tol Coli
for inlormation.

OWNER DESPERATE AND ANXIOUS
TO IELL Utio 3 bedroom ranch hamel Naodi
a little epruclng up. Nlca elzad lo.t 72'x150'.
Attachod 1 car carport. MAKE OWNEFl AND
OFFER TODAYI Raduced 1o $30,800. 1452.

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS. - locelad on Rt. 7 .
(Eureka), 30'x36' block building with otoraga i.n ,
baaament. 70 ft. frontago on AI. 7. Lot tun• Ia Ohto
River. W.s uaad 11 convenient marl DRASTICALLY
. REDUCED. NOW&lt;lNLY ~,000. 00.

.

SECWBION- If you want lo lutl got •wrtt by
yoursolf, have a prlva,. cookout, walk to • ~·
ing opot or jutt enjoy natulll, than don't let lhla
one got away. 4.5 8Cilll, rnll, 3 BR1, bath LR
DR, kltc~an, ·eccall to boating. on
Crealc,.clt)' echoolo. C.U Ruth for fnOill dot.ila. ·

Ra.:X.On

FOR SALE - 40 ICill farm loclttad 8 mll80 on Sllata
Roula 141 on Uncoln Pika. The home ha• 7 rooms ·
and bath. Thalli I• • .bAm and other oulbuildlnge. Aloo .1'
a lamt pond and tobacco bo•.

100'XI50' LOT ON DEBBY DRIVE - Owner
wanla a quick Mle. C.U today and start bufld.
ing right away.

.CONVENIENT DOWNTOWN LOCATION - 1224. TAKE A J..OOK AT THISII - located on
Owner hal retirtd -.,d w.anll aornethlng emelSecond Ava., Rlk to store, cnureh, achooland
er. Thi1 4 or 5 BR home haa ·2 bathe, modem • lhopplng. 2 IIIIIY homa oflarlllltcha~, LR, DR,
kllchen, centllll air and much more. l.ocltted at . FR, 3 BR1, 2 bAIIte,
heat, -tral air.
414 3td Ave. $52,800.
·

1264.'COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 1.4 A.
m~. 248 frontage liang SR 7, just acrooa from
Ohio Riv.r Plaza.
.

HOME ON · STATE ROUTE 5i3 - 11 .rooma, 4
bedroomo, 2 batho, HYing room, dining room, 2
kitchens; • one In baletnan~ almoet 3 SCilll; lruh
_., calar, gorsg.. and itorsga bulking. CALL FOR
AN APPOINTMENT TO SEEIII.
.

1751. PATRIOT AREA. Quiet noighboiltood,
easy living ho!lll ofln 3 BRo, LR, eat~n ltll!&gt;h·
on, nice Ctlrpal, al1liched garage.

LOCATED IN GALUPOUB :o: lilne S..t -' 4 renlal
unlll, good lncoina property. Call for more
lnfonnallon. ·
.

H11. 71 ACREI MIL, Sugar Creek Road Water tap and bam on property. S32,000.

1510. WHITl: ROAD - 20 acras, mil, VICtlnl
lind not m fR&gt;m Charolal• lAke. $20,000,

HOUlE II GAWPOLII- 3 n&gt;om• and b!tth, walking
chlanca to lchoola and 1111.... P1lced et $18;0110.00.
'
WE HAVE BUII,DING.LOTI in ~ ,lllllago II. ~
for more information.
,. _,.,_ . . __ ·
FOR YOUR CONVENII!NCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NU.-ER
• • • • tOll

.tyte hame on SR 180, 3 BRe, lR, kitchen,
bath, !lllachad gerago, 100x300 lot.

go.

.Bappy .B-d#Jyl

.

nee-.

iltof. U1,000-31ota .. oldo•home. B~l, 3
BRa, bath, LR, .kitchen, worklhop and ga,.g8.

,.

.

.,

;:.:&lt;~t:::::::...:·:!.n!:,..~J.I
I'

Hltlng In
$250/rn0.i ' 114·.D85-

IN CIALUPOUS - 3 bodroomo, bllh, kilchen, tivlng
room, baaaman~ 21oll, 201160 and 371150. C.U for
appointment $14,~.00.

1811. LOOKING FOR A PLACE FOR A NEW
BUSINESS - SR 16Q near Bulavillo Plkt
aprox. 200'x200" lot, 11 utiUII!Ia available.
'
'

~vate

2 bt*oom turnlshtd mobile
•... home, 114-t41-0101 lfllr 8:00

'•
•

•

nilhld,

~ "' Pomeroy,

•#

1

112-M77.

Real Estate General

...

.

1\oo bedroom -rtmont In

my homo, 114-lll2-2573.

.

' .

1836. -0- DOWN PAYMENT - LOW
PAYMENTS - Juei pey doling colla
Plus chann, plut volua. For the chooiO/
ranch homo In town. Home hoo new roof, wlndowo and
siding. $46,500.

Rea! Estate General

'

/J J:

.f)

1\ MU t,. iffa~

4.&lt;16·9786.

One bedroom apanmeni, tUr.

very ·cleln. Nlct.
Wllhor-dryor hookup. No polo.

851 Ctar!&lt; Chepel Rd.
llklwalt, 011. 45614

COMMERCIAL·
OFFICE
BUILDING in
Gallipolis.

:rooo

&lt;f) . . . NIWIPAPD IWIU iUU Aa&amp;

MAIN OFFICE- 31WIH

.fOR RENT

Nartlt Myrtle Be... SC.
heart. DeClarer ruffed blgb, casbed
the spade queen and croSsed to dummy by overtaking the carefully pre.
. served spade two.
.
South still wasn't safe, but be avoid.'
ing slipping into oblivion by calling for
·the club queen. When East didn't cover: South unblocked bls jack. Now
· came the club 10. U East bad.covered,
South woald have won with the ace,
played a cl.ub to dunimy's nine and
taken the diamond finesae. Wben East •
didn't cover, Soutb Immediately took
the diamond iinesoe.
·
It won and South jumped onto the
roof of the second building.

·l!tit-ttirtP. t. cfhrt~i

446-9786.

CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS

Pau
All p11t1

Refrigerator,• "~'

Wotor Furnlohod. 1240/Mc. No
Mlln llooth Of Crown .Chy. 114- Pota. 814-446-8038.
3111-2'1'18, 114-258-11148.
Fumlohtd Aport,.nt, Controlly
Locotod, ·Hoot And Cloon, No
34
Business
Peto, Socurlty Dopoolt &amp;
Buildings
Rtfwenca. 11t.41 0444.
c.tmorclol brk:k building,
30x80 IIIU flrtlohod bon.,.nl
'ocro loi. Could ba convoniid
Into booulllul hOlM. Somorvlllo
Roolty::I04.a75-3030 oo 3114-&amp;75-

cial building In
M"'dleport.
Approxlmllaly 3,000
aquare teet. Two
offices, ThrM overheed 1o-loot cloora•
Call 992-6637 or

Eaa1

Norlb

lor Rent

Comonory Araa, Nlco

mont, outbuiidlngo garogo
-•onoblo ront. Middle ogod
couple. Dependable, cleln,
good roforone... 114-38J-4204

For WMkond Trip To South
=~Nov 13-15. Colt Pot 814-

Sloopl~ roomo wKh cooking.
Conditio~, Il-::=:::=======t=========-r.:::::-::=~=-==:1
44 Apartment
44 Apanment
~k
uu,..
Alootroloropaco. All ·
- 'm
lor Rant

Llrge high-ceiling
garag..type commer-

Bllpro

Wanted To Rtnl: Motor Home

t -AQ

FOR RENT

to

houoo,

anytime, lei\1" meoige.

4AJ2
Vulnerable: North-5outh
Dealer: South

U you ask aomepne to walk alona a

Real Estate General

.

PotiWVt, ~ Ott ArM, country
PNtwr.d, conaldttr 'hlc:e' houR
In lown or edge of town. bau-

SOUTH '
.KQJ I072
.QJ

By PbUIIp Alder
narrow piece of woo'd that illylnc on
the ground, normally be will maoage
it without trouble. But suspend tbe
plank between two 20-story bulldtnp
and It Is a differe~t story, If you wtll
excuse the bomopbonea.
So b ·d ha ds
to 1
me f1 ge n . are euy p ay:
the piece of wood Is Pll !be ground.
Others, like today'a, require very carelui stepplng from trick to trick.
Despite · his 20 higb-card points,
South bad a lot of losers. So be gave
Norlb a chance to stop abort of game.
However, with four-card support and
a doubleton, North pushed on to four

!Mve

.52
tKHH

ueu

Renla Is

47 Wanted to Rent

EAST

.AKIOII

Walking
the balance beam

14x70,
2 lrod...._,
1111 Cllrton
Now2 Botho CA
Sat.Up, ·, To Movo \~tol
._6-706
msoo
,.,,:., .
a, 304-&amp;75-

I a.m. • 1:30 p.m. Agoo 21&gt;-10.
ochool. Drop-In,
~ko

a.,.

..

Poull't Doy Coro Coritor.

Would

floor• • trim. New lneulat~
wlndowo, Llnnox hoot pump,
mwt ••· Prlcld for quick ull
Sfi,OOO. 3-2~ or 1-800·
11644173 aok for

'

~ &amp; MmOVII, II'MI, lhrub1,
~· lrM MtlmotH, 304-586-

~

gorogo. Booutltul ook hordwood

•

S. .., eHordable, e;hlldcart. M·F

'·

tM-441-0425.

114-112.a&amp;u.

3
.Qiot

3:30

Rt. 2 &amp; 12 )unction, only 3 mlln
from Polnfl PW!IIInt, 1 ICrt Mil
IOIId brlek. 3 bedrooms, 1112
bathl, ot&gt;aclouo kltchon &amp;
dlnl~, ..ll~rOom, 2 c1r

•

ANTIQUE. COLECTABLES
Marbles, Ford wrenChes, old Pomeroy Theatre aeala,
Man fro(TI U.N.C.LE. lunch box wfThermoa, US
Signal Corps. binoculars, itock·of Bros. "Bear Gr...•
bourbon bottle - Gallipolis, Ohio, treacle •:=~~~ ,
machine, Bugle hlghback bed, dining table w/7 &lt;
&amp; bl!ffel; Conover upright grand piano, handmade
-storage cheat, WWI Cavell)' saddle, chureh pew, plus
I nl•hou &amp; other misc. smalls inc. atone jars &amp; bottles. ·
MODERN &amp;: MISC.
Kenmore dishwasher, electric dl)'ers, bathroom heat·8r&amp;, hospbal beds, Gibson auto. was~er, misc. chairs,
b&lt;&gt;th OS &amp; straight, rockers, mlac. hend tooia, miac.
kitchen pea., large floor to ceiling mirror, toys, misc.
car parts, coal&amp; wood heater, rototiller camerae, .toya,
cash registers:
BOAT • GOLF CART
1974 Appleby Tri hull 14' fiberglass brui basa boat
w/15 hp 1974 Johnson motor and Dilly tiK trailer. Boat
has new carpet &amp; seats, motor haa new carburetors,
complete tuneup &amp; 9.5 covet boat and motor are rlv~r
ready: Haley Davidson goN cart nl8da carb. rebuiK •
"Note" There ere Iota of tmlllla not llatad.
OWner: Mlu Norton
AuctlonNr: Col. W. Keith Molden
114-742·2048
Ohio Lie. 14318
Caah
Lunc~
Poa •. LD.

••o

.

Home FCir Salo 'In Choohlro VII·
- · I Roomo, I bath, Lg, Fill
!.Ail aw Ownw, 1-3:30 P.M.

Jch.-..on'e Trw Strvlct, trim- ·

-

.

'

IIIIHIIaftic Work. frM Elflmttll . .

.

304-a .....m

Sunday

of Pomeroy,
-1000. IIIII· 'h
- ctnttt
oftlco
-··

•au

Run !l.d&lt; lull baaomoiil, pool,

wv

46 Space lor Rent

..WI,

•uu

-4 bod_, homo-1 tot Jorryo

HAPPY BIRTHDAY·MSR

&amp;

3~

..

NORTH

I'D RATHER BE
GOLFING

-hllomood Rd, 8-11. 614-146-

J •'

Duncan FWe table, comer · lhtW,' . square stand
wldrawer, arm chair, rocker, oval ,picture frames,
Peanut matal dinner bucket, atancle, mite. chairs, oil
lal!ll&amp;, oak dreaaer, wood tabla, wicker basket, large
aast braaa Itaya &amp; locka, flat Iron, old hall, coat
hangers, apple peeler, COI!lllele set copper atencll,
buWet, Enterprise E.U.B. C~ureh- 1874-1965, mlnfa·
lUre oil lall"98, picture albu'm &amp; old pictures, Seth
·Thomas mBlltel clock, fancy Romah Numeral clock,
old checl\llr board, . auturm leaf Jewell iea f81 for
four, toy box, toy metal atove w/alcoho] light slide
projector w.1lox of slides, marbla bag wiclay, steellea
and cat eyea, 1894 Almanac Excaisior. tJaltworka,
Koerler Proprietary, key wjnd A E. Al;er, Pomeroy,
Springfield, Ill. w/crystal" protector, Fabre. W. Co.
Swisa, Waltham &amp; Columbia pocket watches,
Schlaege! Bro., Pomeroy, shoe hom, Braille watch;
hand painted. picture b~ Bill Mytra of Atlaa Boat on
Ohio t;llver, milk can, Pomeroy Cement Block paperweight &amp; .etc.
....
"HOUSEHOLD"
4 pc. bedroom su~e. pineapple bed, chrome kltchen
· tabl!l w/2. chalra, pol• lal!lls. round table, Hoover
upright sweeper, lamps, dehumidKier, electric heaters
&amp; fans, couch, hall tree, desk, mirrors, Singer electric
sewing machine, 3 burner gas hotplate, Ia~ furni·
lure, matal wardrobe, 110 air cond~loner &amp; etc. ·
"MISC."
Ajay Octa-Gynn, cal!lling cot, scooter, rollaway ~d.
bicycle, Iron wheel i:art, weights, hand saws, electric
trimmers, lawn Hems, wood carving set, child's table
&amp; chairs, albuina ol all kinde of Nelson Eddie; Kate
Smith, Guy Lurrbardo, claselc music, all kinds of singlee, collectlqn of bow Ilea, approx. 25 sets of cuW· ~nks &amp; tie tacks (mostly to do wbh music), piano jewelry box &amp; etc.
'OWNER-ARVIL L WILES
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER 849-2033
Ohio Llceneei1344 7 W. Va, 515
Refreahmenta by Melga Mueeum
Caah
,·
Poalllve LD.
Annou·ncamenta by•uctlaneertake precedence
over printed matiere.
"Not Reaporialble lor Accldenta or Lo1• of

Real Estate Genetal

Rotroln
NowiiiSouthooll""
B - Cotiogo, Sprlng Volloy
Piau. Coli Tocfril, 614-146-436711

~

SAT., 00. 10, 1992
.· . . .10:90 A.M. . · ·. -

·Thla Ia the pei'IOnal property of thi !Me Albert
HoHner, ·loalled et 150 B.uttemut Ave., PorMrOy,
Ohio. Welch for eigne.
.

HOUSE FOR SALE
Hlltork:ol Aru eo.- Lol • 81&amp;
S~AUTIFUL

Bull.nMI, TechnOlogy /Scltnc:e.
Send $20 To Funds, P.O. Boll · Baths, 3 Large Bedi'OOml, New
HVAC, Now Carpot, Avollablt
142, Gllllpoll1, OH 45631.,

· HOSPITAL JOBS .

'

SATURDAY,OCT.10, 1992,7:00P.M.

PUBLIC AUOION

Point Pleasant,

31 Homeetor Sale

PUBLIC AUOION

PubllcSale
lAuctlon

Homes tor Sale

2 Or 3 Bedroom., 8aMm~~nt
With Flrtplact. 614-446.ee9511.
:Jbdrm. ho~•. large bath,
centn~l air condition, call 814·
·~Erporlonco DOslrod, Not
8Md A•ume: Box

'

October 4, 1982

Point Plea•nt, W}l .

8

1 Btdroom Small HouM, Good
lnvntment ~rty. &amp;4 Mill
Crlltlc, GalllpoUo. 614:o!46-lll81.

'

..

~.

,.

I
f·

. ,,

' #•

'

.
•

r
I

3 bedroom•.
room on level lot. Also large
aaa this one. 11464 .

QUAUTY HOME - Owner baing tranafetTed
out ol liM: 5 BR, 3 balhl, ln11round 20)140
pool. I!Mutifully docoratad. Cal now. Ratluced
Ill $126,000.
.
1454
OWNER WANTS SOLD - This wall bui. brick
hame with 2 bedroom•, 1 balh, laundry roilm,
. living and d~ing room, kilchen, 1 ~r attached
garage. !Atge wolk·ln ettic nice patio end l·
ehaped front porch and mono. Reduced 'to
. $48,1100.
.f3112 .
RUSSEL D. WOOD
· Ownsr/Broker

ew.446 4s1s
TAMMIE

.

Eve: 441·151~
.

.. Evei 37$-2184 .

.,

FARM ON LONG' HOU.OW RD. This
homo hu 2 bedrooms, 2 ballto, living ·room,
dining .room, kitchen,. screened froht porch,

heat pump, central air, «1'~30' polo ohad. All
litis and more on 107 acres m~. Asking only
S55,500.and owner will finance down peymanL.
What more could you asll f!lr.
H23
NEW USnNG ON FRANK RD. - A partial
brick nonclt on 1.034 sc. 1111'1 wllh 3 badroclma,
11S baths, living rooin, dining room and kilchan.
One Ctlr gonoga altacltod. Alking.onty ~.500.
Call today. t462

PHYLUS L. MILLER
Sales Agent ·
Eve. 2.56-1136

•

CARTER
· Brour/Agent

Sales Agent

o.•

PATRICK A. COCHRA~
offiCe Mansgar
Eve. 446 8655

J. MERRILL

DeWITT

CITY UVING IS FOR YOU THATS
·WHAT YOU'Ll. GET with thil wall mlintained
two bedroom home with alum. aiding, fonced In
back yard; a la~g~ encloaad beck porch lor
tho .. warm summer nlg\11 or enjoy the central
air. One car IJ&amp;rB(Itl wlatolllga, walking dla·
tanca to · clinic and much mono. Reduced to
$48,000. Call for your appolnbnent.
· 1444
CLOIE INI Enjoy a view of the ttVar from 1he
groat mom of thio lovely e yMr old, 3 bodroom,
3 bath homo with lamlly room end flnlehed
bAaernen~ nina cloaell, 2 are walk-ln. Tax fraa
lor nina yea111. Too many amanlllaa to mention
hera Call lor mora Information. Asking ao'o.
.
.
1475
CIESHIRE· VILLAGE io thlo wall asllblialted
uaad car bullnall on Rl. 7, wllh IWo bay
garsga and office. A mobile homa that has 2
bedroom•. 1 bath, living rm., dining nn. and
kltch•n. Asking $911,500. Without mobile
$88,500.

. CATHY A. WRAY

Sales Agent
Eve. US 4215

CYNTHIA

J. DRONGOWsKI

$aiM Agent
Eve. 245-1617 ·

MARTHA L. SMITH
SallaAgent

Eve, 378-2661
"
CHERYL L. LEMLEY

Meigs Co. A!l'nt

Eve. 742-3171

\

.

.'

�' .

i

nme.-..s.ntlnel

.

SNAFU® by Bruce.

A

54 l\otltcellaneout

wv
'N' CARLYL,E® by LU'rv Wrtl)l'

m

Pttetorllla

.

........... pi'tcj,ll4-.am.·
....._
u.,...,

1.1 Cu. Fl. .' Litton Microwave,
W..U l GoOd. C&lt;&gt;nd. $50, 614· ·
.

ion -

Oa~ Tablu,

Nllural

Whllo Twin Bod, Mono Woddlng
land. 30+e75-4i53.
COUNTRY FURNITURE
Opining OCotbor 3, 1V92, 223t
Slata Route M1, Q#llll~llt, 614·
441-1422. Wo Buy And Sell Good
u.ct Furnlturw Local Pick-Up
And Dollvary. Monday Thru
Salurdoy. ~ P.il. Wo Will Aloo

Clltory:

CFA_J:

....... · - Kilt.... 31U All• 7:00

You,.

11171 C-to buo, 42 i&gt;oooongor,
· ... new tlrM, automatic t111nam1 ..
oiofl, wory cloan; IM-J1!2·2131.
181i l _
ulck Skytorl&lt;, rabulft onghlo1 aood work car, 1500; 614·
.m ...m aftor 5:00.
1UI Plymouth Reliant K, 304·

' I'm not hungry enough ·yet to try
this bird feeder. "

APPLIANCES

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

acll¥1tn porwo, I'Oiio, ECHO
and
~
v~
~
olnlaatacNdl~ bnnoi bKtorla. AlO Filii &amp; S•-'• 114212-2114.
WJIII"II

=
IIU-

llalo - • a Woolca Old,

l.t-3

.u&lt;c

(I IH2 b1 NEA. Inc.

lloalolond, lot Bholo, Tr~

DJO. 114411-13M,

lllnlaturo Daofioltund

13 ou.... .....
&amp; lvw rongo; a-. 304-571--24ll.

Oak Fumiture. 614-446-4316.

rangal. IVICidO
grHn, $50. 614-446-9o25.
PICKENS f!JRNITUAE
NoWIUsod
Hou11hold tumlthlng. 112 mi.
J~rricho Ad. Pt. Pleasant, WV,
caii30H75-1450.
Refrlgeretort, FrteZira, Washer,
Dry_·If!. Air Cqndillonar, Color
T.V.'o •tc. 614·2511-1238. ·
Rolrtgorotoro $75 to $150;
automatic waehera &amp; electric
dryel'l $7S lo $150; new .gas
' dryar S85, gil range• t75 · to
$150, 'ltctrfc rangn S75 to
$125; 2 portablo ilshwuhoro
w. aleo atock new and
uood oppllanco ports. Dolborl
Bwlohlr'o Uood Appllancao:
Comor of Rand 6 Porch St.,
Kanauga, Ohio. 614-446-l473.
Roarlgorotoro: OE Hotpolnt 18
cu 11 lraet frwrl, white, Ilk• new,
1:121. Frigldalro 17 cu ft, 1root
tno, copportono $1VI. Both
dian &amp; guanntNd, frll local
dell'ltlry, 304-57'6-2596 after·
PhUc:o e1ec

seo ...

-or.

high
rubbOr,

1VU Votkftagon

6

• 11U Ca...,.. wltft 111111 VII onglne, new llrM, murtltr, tailpipe,

Umou.ln and Hereford · croa

1112~635,

~..75--4220.

. 40

mpg.

. 2440.

~

. '

.

Inc;, 45719
Specializing in Pole
BLildings.
Designed tl meet your

Canneibu'lj,

'.

needs. Any size.

CHOICE OF 10 COLORS

-I
THE PRICE IS NICE! - $48,600 buya IIIII 3
bedroom, 1 bath vinyl wilh abchecl'
Replacement windowo and vinyl tieing . ~
mainlotlance lo a mkllmum. The o,....l condi·
tion of 111'- home '- excellent and lum11C8 Is
lletWcaiiDdayl
150:2

.a..

noon1.
·
llotol Bodo Wllh Sprlngo, Wood
SOlo On All VInyl In Stoek $3.99 Stovo
With Blow" Old Woodon
Carpet $!.00 Up. Mollohan fur- Wordrobo
Malol OMk + Othor
nlhll'l, l'ft448-7444.
Hama. Cah For Prien, 614-44631192, Or 1~111311.

AIC,

suoo.

FL. IPER
8
17

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
-·'
Unconditional llflllme guaran·
tH . Local refarencn tumlshed.
Free ••Umat11. Call collect 1·
614-237.o488, day ·o r night.
Rogers Basement Waterproofing.

~ta~o.

I

PH. 446•7699 or

RON EVANS ENTEAPKISES
Jackeon, OH 1-800-537-8528. '

Real Estate General

• ,Loocfocfl ~~collonl Condition!
_. 614 441 4225, Aftor $p.m.
1117 Plymouth Horizon 56 000
mla Vory good condition. $1,liio.
814-44CI-4308 oftor .5:30
19110 S·10 Blozar1 l.oadodl 49 000
Min, CINn Aaklng $12 !ioo.
.. 614-441-1384.
•

"

-=--~· -~--·•:..;:;--::~
.

~

Real Estate General

r4 ..,.... .
~

-

.

.

. ~ Canaday
· Realty

w~~~~?~:,_'fH:.Es~~~~ ~R~~~~~gT~~

446•3636

·• 11171 Chowy 1 112 Ton Truck, 12
...Ft., Gral~ Bed, 4 Spud, EzceJ.
lont Condition, 614-245..1624.
.
.1110 Chovralol Luv, Runs_Good,
.~· Look• Good, , PB_
, Air Cond.
~:J 2 Alcina Lown Mowori,
. .
Cond. $250 Each. 614-446-

..

.

I'NYHOUR

new tii'MI, 73000ml., $3500 080,

, Living?
$8,000.
room, 1
hQma
olfe.-. off _IIIMI pari&lt;ing and 11 ·

Hydraulic Tall Gate Ull, For
Pickup&amp;, $450, John'a Auto
. ~In, 614-446--4782.
.

modoit 12, Nl'!..~95; 20 guago
Rernlng1on aro , Wlngmaslar,
NIB, $3115; Moooborg 410, NIB,
$215; 814·742·3114.
Sluga Wlnchaater 5 cOunt boxas
tk. Now that we have your It·
tentlon herel · how, buy 2 boxs

608 EAST MAIN

' POMEROY.,. OHI9

enjoy IIIIa newly conetructed log ·
·
IronI porch to . onjoy cool eurnmer
breeze~; ' attractive woodburner and hearth to
wann .your IOUI on thooe cold wlnler nl!lhte.
ApprolC. 2,300 aq. ft. of comfortabla lfv!lig
apaca including 3 bedroom• ~room for 4111),
wry eltJaclive country lcltdten, Nvlng room with
pine caWing, rt11wly firiohed flflllly Cl)On1 and 2~ ·
~~&amp;tho. Large 2 car ~rag. with overhead Ito('
Approx: 5 years old. $811,900.
1211.

N!CHOLS RD.- OWNER WANTS·TO
AND
. ARE ANXIOUS TO SEW Thia II a very nice IIIIIch ~
home with 3 bedroome, 2 -balhs on 1,053 acral. Home
hu newor heat pump &amp; alec, hot walllr lank. ia c:arpollld
throughout. lnciW.e garbage diopooal, 'd llhwuher &amp;
ranga, .t.nc»roen windows with otonno &amp; ac,_,l, cent!W
air, added ineulaHon PLUS a 12ft. round abo¥• ground
pool wilh deeking &amp; privacy fence, 2 outbuilding• MUCH
MOREl MUST SEEI ASKING $46,000 may conlidllr any
raa!IOnable offorl.

..

.

1183 Yarnaha
on lnepectlon,

21" RCA Color T.V. Romoto
Wood Cablnot $150; 25" Zonlth
~., T.V. Wood Cablnot $100;
Sttrto Stand With Gla11 Front
ttl; Hoover Conctpt TwO
Upright $75. 114 441 85h.
3 mo old eouch &amp; lovastel, uc

cond,
Pill.

304-e75~7188

after 5:00
.

4 Itt StOOit, $30.00 Each.

-=·14-441-2410.
looutlful HNvy Duty Woodbur. ·
ner, E1c:1. Cond., Solid ·Front'
Door AOmovod For Scr-. $175
Or WIK Tracto. 114-4-511.
lrond now 1082 HARO 1.Crodng blcyclo, 20 ln., lllollmo
- o n - O t t g. priao
tzlt, will oolll230. 114-4*1147.

'=·
• etaan

llanroao

-

.

,

~1.;I alud
.,.rblo olobo,
A/all.
T - n o wator

·-

t2.!!.0:, ~· ..blo - · $150;

...,..., ;;j

:=.zooS;

b.: ::a,..o!i,:,blo.·
llinptlolty r1c11ng

BRANCH OFACE -446-6806
23 Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

- ~

iii§

. u:.a
............

­

·--

•

MIS LOOKING FOR THAT QUALITY HOME

CLOSE TO TOWN? - Horo ft 10. 4 bodlooml, 2
balho, 'lvtng room, dlnlng/ldlchon eomblnod, lull
- w l l h l...... tOOtli.A MUST TO SEEI

· A SCENIC QUET PLACE TO LI'IE - 3 lola
.,~Court~---_,.

. -

DO!f'T '!OUCH A TIINQ - Just move right

Into thlt pamperad -3 bednJom, 2 bath ·rancl'l
wllh caralrM bricl&lt;·and vinyl ull!rior and 2 car
abchad gWag&amp; .. Step inoiile antlse&amp;the new
carpet, lhe large m..-olllt auite and the overal
· grHt condition_. lnolanHy lnvili&gt;g at $64,500.

~aiMDwcM
" .'
ALL

ANDIt
home
hae
alii 2208 oq. of living opaca, 3 badroome, 2
Thlt
log home hits a newer Lannox h..t pump &amp; central al~
also a woodbumer with ot0rt11 backing, bul~·ln cablneta
and booklhelvoa, added ineulation and attic opace for
extra ltOI'aga. This home Is embraced by· a Ia~ wrap
aroiJild potch auilable lor viewilg tho allachod 3Y. acrao
also lncludoe 2 outbuildngo. II you ike the outdoo,. and
hav1ng room lo mwe Ifill It for YOU I·ASKING $80,000.
COME SEE, ENJOY, MAKE AN ;OFFERI.
..
.
I . • ..
.

INCOME PAOOUCING PROPERTY - Good '
In town lociltion, clooe lo achool keopo thlo
doUble ranted. Good condition. Nk:a lot. Qlf
street parl&lt;ing. $44,500.
1218

' PROBABLY - NO IIAYBE"o ••••NOT EVEN
UndoubtOllly. the_ beet country view a'9und.
PERIODI Every time you driva lhl1 etrelch of
11*1. you marvel at how beautiful and waH kopt
the a,..; 11. lma'aina owning MWiv 7 acrao,
pa~ on a knoll, owrloolciilg 'the l!ob
Fann ai Rio G~l What a ~euralt wauld .
be to wake up oach I!IOmlng. Enjoy wt1tchlng
tha horoeo and oattla graze. E~ ari
outatandlng ounoel avary -lng.
r 2
bedroom home and pond Included: ·Fancad•.
Cll Daw lor mora illomM!IIon.
1208 ·

NEW USTINQ - Vacant lot 80x80 locilllld at 124 Laurol .
Sl1n Pomeroy. f!SKING 13,600,
. NEW USTlNG- Vacant lot.40x1361ocallld on Peacock
Avo. In Pomeroy. Aoking 13,500,

REDUCED! FEDUCEDI -o-r moving oui

af .... Anxloul "' Ollllhlt oeclt idad horne lit· .
uated on 4.223 ecrao, rn/1, with 1111811 pond, 3
bedC09flll, 2, batlo, llvtlia room, famUy room,
illnlng 1'00111 and larQa klldtan, now add an
above ground pool and 1 car aa19 with lhod.
WE !laved thi1 lor only 138,1500.
IIGI

REDuCED- CHESTER wall known atlablllhed buoineu
ra&amp;dy for DCalfl•ncv by youl Builcing 11 40X90+ lncluda1
eqLAipmont and lroo gu to building. Groot opportunity If
you're thinking of going Into bu1lna11. Call IDday for
c»latlll
,. . .~
.

~

I

·,

now-·

11772. HIDDEN TREASUJE - SufJlJISinatt low plloo
of $110,000. llore than 5.000 oq. ft. of living and lalgo filii. tm&gt;ugltout. TNt homo .olars 4 -.o., 2 bOllia, n1
lng, 2 wb IINI&gt;Iocv-. family rm., -.1n Wll&gt;ar·

il:ll. COMMERCIAL or IESIDEHTIAL - LAND

- ~ Avo.
to .combino homo .... ()tjo
RMr llorilago, Vofy nlco 3 homo with
CONTRACT -' Primo

.• bocii0,2Cil'QO'"gl. 11111oorlaundry.

Qlportunlly

ijipiionCtil,

e753. HOllE, CABIN l RIVER aon011 ·
lng Ofllo Rlvor. $37,000, 3 -; luldt&lt;ltlod
bailment, 1~ bd11, bulklfr.J. Oly.
1127. LAROE 2 STORY HOllE on 8tala Routt. 3

bedfoonw, bath, LR, OR., klchln,

oil furnace, bam,

and latgo lot. $23,000.
. 1140. NEW"LISTINO • 4.
2 bath ranch
hOmo With llnilhld buomant !ioma It! iocltad on
0.840 m/llol. Ptloo tin till $30
- ·a...,·_...,.._....,.,.

bOdroOm,

tm. VINTON CO. FARM: 1..-od on 8R 180,
3
h o m o -· Allo I
1m Acatltfl\l.- homo- 2 - .. - ·
dlnlrG ..._ LR and bafh, born __
w-.., tool - ·
--.soac.m/1._.,

1131. NEW LilTiNG II TOWN -NEAT N4D
Cl.llAN 2 -.om homo with ond dining
1n1, bath, goa hlol- CIA, range

-.It"'*

NEW U811NGI - Oak 'lhaded lot. Clooe to
town lociltion.· Roonir, bi.Joval home. Family
room llarlld In lowr .vel (not much 1o finllh),
3 bedrooma, oat~n kitchen, living room. Priced.
to _. at 148,1100.
12415

·.

DAVID WISEMAN, BROK~R • 446·9555.
'
Loretta McDade- 448-7729
Carolyn Waach- 441·1007
L Jo tta.lraton - 448 4240
Ganiea-

O!'fl~-·"'-"'-·----- ..------...llt-2211

~~~----------~~
r
. •

-· ......

....

.. . '
''

.. . . . . .

.

..

.,.--.

....

.,., "

'

.

...-

.,

.

,

~···f-¥""0'­

•····•

rraldrV

•,

ha:J::.

..•

a..

ful blnl'l'llrf. Thtl 11 a maney

ac.

'

HENRY E. CLELAJolo.._ ·.
.
.
_,,,,,:_,_..._,,, __,....111
TRACY MINAQEJL ___,,;_ ______ Ill
.JEAN 'IIIUIIELL--- -· ----MNIIO

1fl basom111, lllol olllumooo, cfi/OChOOII, on s ....
mil. S40'a. .
!
.
.
.
.
tm. VINTON CO. F -: LA&gt;colod on SR 180.
AIIIO+ilbll 3 biMtnt., brtc*: home wt !Tlllt: AIID a ·
1117D Acodantv . - hOmO hU 2 boctma., ltl.,

dlnlrG
.....
both,llooltyborn · - · tool - ·
-·
5Lll
0and
ac. mil_.

""'*"""""
-lv·

Mil-.

;111. 8WEET 1o LOW - COmiiiJ1ablo -omal 2
lioem. homo. Lotei~IIIB',
b. gao hoal on
_ _ _ $16,000 . .

.............. dlopooll, V«Y -

.

.... ...... . '

..

.

;

1712. FOUR BEM"'OI HOllE, 2 BATHI - f1ocM1W .
homo In . . - . y, _ . worft

Wivr~tiiii-.!Oi;,o

--.
lldlng,
..... - · .
18Jc53
. llo
--......-.clOd
and pod.-intO hfftlo homO·
and
IIGp
........lad .. HQdy - · -

looldiV .......

~

--In_,_

yanl-- $30'0•
'

1101. A 0000 BUY AT $27,100. EUREKA - 2-3
BR:I, 1 bath, LA, lll-kl lclc:flln, 112 b•n• •· ga

. 1111. NICIOTtAILE P11C1 - llwp, - l y

- . 1 OUIDidg.30/ltt4/....,.. ons.aaac.tllo1.

- - - 11 IOial .... 415 - . 3 - . l.R,
OR. _lilt., utll)' rm., lull dhldod bo ••• wlh family
.... 2 -IJI'IIIO· pool ond polo. 1 ... 11&gt;1. •

RE_DU&lt;;~ID ..

to,_

COME II AND . .
.

...

1754. SEClUDED COnAOE FOil TWO - 2 bodlt&gt;Oms, larve l.R, lui bllh, Ill-In ltlldlon, 2 porchot,
,.... rapan hlvo boon made to ..- Util a oomlort_.....,._$20,000.

yo,.lurFCtn ~ In INIIt*' lind .... 3 BR, 1
balh homo wlh LR, lalga FR. oal·tl ltldlon, - ·

-

- · NEW LIITlHG - LOCATED JUST OFF SR
S&amp; .o· lntntoculalo ronch will ' now ltq&gt;rowamorll.
LDwely- - • lfwwghot4,
roof 3 yura
old, 2 bedrml;., LA, formal cln. .rm., ldl., •DMed 1ron1
' poodt, olflco rm. or llludy ,lind booomont.
_ -

1717. PRII!E DEVElOPIIEHT LAND - l.llnd llyl
woll. Oldor 2 ttlol)' brtciC homo with 4 ~ ond
' bulltlngo. - I n Mod ol ........ 121 ac mil. 011 SR
S&amp;,Nttrllng--

.

FoR YOUI

~

EASY TD LOYE KITCHEN - 11 iull one of
lha 1Ntura1 that you will oppracialll In IIIIo ~
bedroom ranch on 81/2 acl81, m/1, Others
inciW. new citrpeting, alactric
ump, 2
oar garage and oalallllll dloh ..Cd
y. Thil
prloe: 158,1100.
1501

IIDOLEPORT - 1 I!Oor frame home with a· bedrooml
bath, full buamanl,' one c;ar garage, F.A.N.G.:
..,Piancao, atlc epaca, Really .... and allonlabla at only
WE HAVE 1lE HOME
. OUR IELE~

-o.

rar.·.

COMMERCIAL BUSINEI
lor moll any typ. of bullneoa.
.
oq, ll bulking ml ~~tin .
par month. 2 bedroom aparlment
overhead. Building could be tranlfonnad lnlo ·
talldantial property vary aallly. Prlcad at
f75,000. ·Run a buolnaoo bafow and live
fttO
uplllll,.,
SMALL BUT SNAPPY - Excaplonally claan.
and unclutterod 3 baclroom ranch. No honey·
do proJect• hera. Dot1'f inlu fila oria - call lor
an appolnlmont today. You won't believe the
prioa ol f37,1100.
'
1101 . .

IO C:itlrillaiol.ik. Dr. to

..... I.Joenood for 10
AI furnluro Ond
oqulpmonl 1-d. also 2 bodnn. Falnnonl homo
w/~ tub and lumlture. 3 oc. mil.
!"

NEW LISTING CRAYIIG A UTTLE
SOUTHERN ELEGANCE II YOUR UFE7 ,.;
Thon you mull - thle horne. Be lmpraaoed
•• you ...., Into the ovarolzad lonnal living
fOOm and clnlng room wltl 2 ftra~. Cozy
hlllllly room, lcllcltan and bodh. Upttbira you wii
ftnd 2-3 bedroomo; pluo a large beth with
whlrtpool tub. Ample outdoor araa featuri!lll ·
large acraaned In pon:h, tun patio 2 car
garage with thad and 2 ho110 otdt, c8i11Dc1ay
for your chanoe to own your 'Mini
Pricad
a( only $74,9001
. · .
·
H01

e.,.,.

REDUCED o. BAUM SUBDIVISION - Extremely nice
home. In vary nk:a location! Thlo brickllrama ranch aty1o
homo foaturaa 3 bedroomo, full Nnilhad b...mont, a
~x14 allachad ga,.ga, fir.pl-. N.G.F.A. heat, contral
11r. Owner hlto roducad.to $48,750 (make an allot).

•

-

1801. BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN with . . . - .
lncorno. LDwely hOmO plio ooparato living - -

INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY - Over
$1,200 per monfl income ia produced lrom lhls'
nva unit apaltmont building. Good location ·In
town. Good rantal hlotory, Very nlc;a lot with
accau to back dey. 159,1100, ·
ftOii

relaJC . You have a large itoc:kad pond, pas·
ture, timber and 3,bedroom IMflll IOdgCI. UICMr
bam, fiUit treal and mora. Locatec:f on Lew
Jcne• Road. Call lor price.
1700

~.ooo.

REDUCED - Tltlo

ranch hOmO II wolcon*lg you to "'*'Y h bonotldol
piiUUJWI oiCOI!Hrt nl doolgrl. feat- aloe. hoat,
cent olr, IVOfl*a, 2 car II""V\\• and appllanooo.
Homo ilaltualodon40Xt50iolnlhaa app. 1838oq,
ft. Homo It! porleclly balarad for comfort.

-.-.tnyt-.-Ml.GIMI_,

Bo•

:r:an~J':;:/~YJ:.'1,~

14UOI4.

45614

1712. CHECK THIS PRICE OUT. - 132,000 • COzy
a bodroom, 1 balh, living room , dlnlngiklchon

Antiques

3805.
_
14K
Set:

Bidwell,

.

..
PLACE to

13" color TV with remole In
yworttlng condlllon; . sola and
matching cbalr, belae · fall
colort, good cOndllloni 614·985·

Real Estate General

VIRGINIA A. SMffil, BROKER, 388-8826
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR; 446-1897
RUTH BARil, REALTOR, 446-0722
DEBORAH SCITES, REALTOR, 448-006
·LYNDA-FRALEY, REALTOR, 448-6806
MICHAEL MiL!,ER, REALTOR, oMu806
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, 245·9575

./)

•'

'

·54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

MAIN OFACE - 388-8826
958 Clark Chapel Rd. .

.. ~'·

S~p, ~4~75-2NI .

to 1:00 p.m. 114·1112·252e. ·

..Real Estate General

Real Estate General

PROFESSIONAL SERVIa MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

$1.111 Nch &amp; got $2.0Q bock

Buy at eell. Riverine ~nllques ,
112"4 E. Main StrMt, on At. 124 ,
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00

25 ACRES MIL- LOCATED IN CHESHIRE TWP. NICE
PRIVATE SETTING. LAND IS PARTIALLY WOODED.
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME. EXCEPTIONAL BUY ·AT
$39,600.
MLS 1358

l!t~jtirt,'4 t. ·thrt~"
J1 r._
oh.
1\ ea.~ t.- .rtate

tat Income from rental ttelp •
wilh payment&amp; .· Concrete block building with
drivo_.lhiU for cany o~ . including d ~ipment :
and onvenl\)ly. rantal tncomo lrom doublewide
on
Call for more dolais.
1513

from Wlnch11ter, llmh on• per
family addraat. Trl County Sport

53

IF YOU'RE JUST A UTTLE BIG COUNTRY - THIS
APPROX. 24 ACRES SPREAD MIGHT SUIT YOU FINE I
LAND IS MOSTLY FENCED PASTURE WITH A
BEAUTIFUL WOODED AREA. FOR FAMILY FUN
THERE IS A COL'f CABIN WITH FIREPLACE BESIDE A
SlOCKED POND. THE MAIN . HOUSE HAS 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FAMILY ROOM FEATURES
CHERRY PANELING. AND FIAEPLAC.E. 2 CAR
GARAGE, SEVERAL OUTBUILDINGS. JUST MINUTES
FROM TOWN.
MLS 1157

9'92-2259 .

Wook; Solo And Chair $1o.93
Wook; Lompo $3.31 WHk;
Rocllnan $5.52 WH~i. Dlnotto
With 4 Chalro $7.25 wook; Or
Tabt. Wlth Bench And 4 Chairs
Wlllotchlng Hutch $20.19 Wook;
Rofrlgorotor
$11.22
WHk;
Wooller l Dl)'or Sot $16.85
Wailkj EIKh'IC Ranga With
Olaoo Door $11.22 Wool&lt;.

Shotgun• 12 guage, Beraua

tts,ooo:

RESIDENcE AND MOBILE HOME PARK- VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX.
23 ACRES. BACK PORCHES, 2 CAR GARAGE. 8
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5
I
PRESENTLY RENTED.
CALL FOR COMPLETE

Real Estate General

Complete $5.88

52 Sporting,Goods

APPROX. 25 ACFEI - OLD
HOUSE NEI:OS REPAIRS.
SMALL
BARN , RURAL
WATER TAP, NICE SITE
FOR NEW HOME OR
MOBILE HOME. OHIO TWP.

THIRTY-FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS - BARGAIN
PRICED 2 STORY, 3 BEDROOM HOME IN CITY.
CONVENIENT LOCATION. WALK TO SCHOOL,
CHURCH AND SHOPPING.
'
MLS 1658

OFFICE: 25 -LOCUST ST.
G~LLIPOLIS, 0 45631

P • FLOYD
REALTOR ·1·:6-3383

11048.

Ever.

CASH AND CARRY • Sola And
atalr $UtVi Lampe Starting At
$11.16 Eac.~; Toblo W~h 4 Chairs
Ita Sol: woohor I Dryor $599
&amp;.ti Refrigerator $318; Elt'ctrlc
And Goo Rangn Avlliiblo.
·
Located • U"pper Rlv8r Road
Btlow Sliver Bridge Plaza Or 4
Mlln Oul 141 In Centenary On
Uncoln Plko.

REALTOR 4·16- 3636
HA~Y

runa perfKt. $8,000. 1 ....388-

• VI'AA FURNITURE AND APPUANCES
114-441-4428
614-446-3158
RENT·2.0WN
. No Dopoalt • GRAND OPENING
No!hlng Praownod Or Usod,
Bunk Bed•

AUDREY P . CAtlliDAY

11tl Nlooan 2x4, 6 spd.:
AMIFMJCau., Toneau cover.

114-1112-7733.
) howralot, FOfd, Dodg• pickup
boclo. Slto~ ., long. No ruat.
304.(17~286.
.

COME IN FROM THE COLDI YOU AND YOUR FAMILY.
WILL SPEND MAN1'( LONG WINTER EVENINGS •
ENJOYING .THE WARMTH OF THIS HOME. COZY
FIREPLACE IN THE LIVING ROOM PLUS FAMILY
ROOM HAS HEARTH WITH WOOD-BURNER 4
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, WORKSAVER KITCHEN wiTH
SNACK BAA, FOAMAb. DINING, 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE . EXTERIOR IS NATURAL REDWOOD AND
BLENDS PERFECTLY WITH 9 PINE STUDDED ACRES.

WITH FIREPLACE,FORMAI. DINING, DEN, KITCHEN
EQUIPPED WITH RANGE, TAAS,H COMPACTO_
R AND
'DI!)HWASHER, FULL BASEMENT, 15'X10' CONCRETE
BASKETBALL COURT, GAS FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR
. COND. , !!PPLE, PLUM AND CHERRY TREES,
GARDEN AREA. EXCELLENT BUY AT $52,000. NEW
ON THE MARKET.

;:-;;;:;-.:--:~:-.:--.--=

' Vofy raro china cablnot from
: Gerralny, 3fM...773-6Q58.
.

Real estate General

,..,....

~-

-·'[#

.

83 Bronco, automatic, PS, P B,

BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNlOWN, 2ND AYE., CLOSE TO OOUFITHOUIE

Co.

·; ::":=58;-;.
1983 F-250 Ford, aulo, eir, PS,
' PI, dual tanke, 30WB2·3466.

~

wate;

10

9

"'1. ACRES -NICE FARM HOUSE
Nk:a 9 room country home, up to 5 bedroom• Wnaedod
Uko liow lhingle roof rocendy lnltalled. Rural
system, new 'llnyl Whitt oldlng, lnlllllation blown .ln.
Wol1&lt;1hop, coin crib, cellar houoo, _and I!Drago building.
All mineral ri!jlte go, fruit !ralls, Col. &amp; So. Powar Co.
olectric. Belho fi,.t to -and bUY.Ihltlann.
1701

8apllc Tonk Pumplng_SIIOLGallla

•

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Oliva Sl., Gtlllpoll•. N.w &amp; Uled
furniture, hutert, Wntem &amp;
Worlt _._ 114-441-315V. ·

EleCtrical 1
Refrigeration

LEADINGHAM REAL iSTAU

· 72 Trucks for Sale

1201

84

~75-1781.

.

•

I Retnodli

Aoolcfontlal o&lt; conimorclal
wiring, MW IHf'YICie or r.paH.
Maotor Uoonood olactrtclan.
Akltnour Ellclrlcal, WV000301,

304-675--

. 'mlloo. :IOW82·2884.

The elder Congressman
was chatting with a new col·
league. "You can't fool all the
people all the time," he stated,
"but a simple majority every •
' ,IS .......... I"
.
two years

6

•r. ~

lng, - · -""'· .... Oualhy
worlt. 11M ootlmatao, 304-475182t. WYeQ20311.

Home
Improvements ·

•• ·1181 Chev. ClvaUar. Blue, 5 spd
-~ AC, AM-FM atareo, 23 Ood

relaxing by your own private pond
not
hearing anything but the fish bitol Val)' privalll
• home In Clrean Township, Over ·4 acres of
heavenly back yard. Comfortable home with a
kitchon that won't quil Givo uo a c:all1orinora-

Triple

END0 RM

·, ·1181 Oldal Delta 88, VInyl Top

D. C. Metal S.lu, IIC•.

I

~=2::

304-e75-1731.

1187 Dodge, auto 3Simpg
$1,71lQ. 1VB.,. Plymouth Ho&lt;lzon,

· Post Buldings and
Paclcage Deals. Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
of Dollats.

s

Services

1181 Pontiac Grand Am SE ,
loaded, klW mileage, 111cell•nt
condlliOJ!. 30H'75-3791. .

For Sale- woodburnar, 111tellenl

Lib !leW: Warm llomlnv Stowo
Plpo'o And Eworythlng lncludodf
$210. 114-311'-77111 Bolon 8 A.II.
Or Aftor 5 P.ll.
.

.

Ron'o TV ilomoo, opoclallzlng
In Zonlth alao llniiOina moot
olhor brande. oaiTo, -

11171' MountalnMr truck camper
V 112 I , oolf contolnod. $1,295:

$2801). 304~75--4138.

.

h~L

LUJSTY

OX•

198e
Olda
98
Regency
Brougham. Bur~H~ndv, 13000.

Aorotlon ...._ ropalrod. l ...touMt - I n otock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, Ott

,.,

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Motor Homes

•

1914 Ply. Stot_lon \Vogon, Now
· Tirn &amp; Brakn, · Rui)O Good
$1,000; 11177 Ford Club Cob Pick·
"~.Auno Good $90Q, 614·387·

ler&amp;pm.

All, $10, ·~a..m7.

76

1-

JET

814-..... ,... .

oollont ._condition, now
and bOno, nol UH qll
black, lnlerttat• travel, garage:

lock Sal•, U.S. 50 Wool, AI·
beny, Olllo. 114·5112-2322, 614·
HW131.

FREE ESTIMATES ON

.3

--:---.:::::=::====
hooooSI.

HMIIIng AV.II•ble. Athena Uv...

Firewood, Oak, Hickory, Ash,
Spllt1 Stacked, Dallverld , $40
Loaa. 614-367.()131.
For Sal~ Size medium ladlt&amp;
wlntar coal, denim wl leather
trim, 11annalllnlng, like new, as-king $100, paid $150; also 'misc.
lacUea clothlngi call 814-992·
2155, 9-.lpm or 614-1411-2204 af·

114-11414052.

11M Filth Avonua, icadod,

S-Ial F-r COif Solo, Oc·
tobor 8th At 8 P.ll. COttlo Accoj&gt;tad Starting Wadnoodoy Aftor 4
P.ll. 4 P.ll. To 10 P.M. WodnMctoy ' All Dly Thuroday. All
8 - , Uvoolock Accoptid.

King Wood /Coal Stovo With
Fan $300 lJood 2Y'!,,_Caot Iron
Balh Tub, Logo,l14...,t.ot58.
Lorgo Solghlor fuol oil otovo 101

-and

PER S O.Y

PlonHr •lNG, ov,.-clrlve· 814-

bull, 1000 lbo., 1750; Horoford
lteer, 710 lba., $471; 114·'11t2·

:1'081: .

condftlon, $150, 814·H2-3187.
Full Tanlt Of Fuol Oil, $20Q. Can
Bo Tronolorrod.I14-44S.2823. .
Genet~ll
Nutrition RrOducta
toaturtng Amino Acid Body
Building wolaltt looo and tot
b•mor t'ormuru. Avallablo ...
ctuolvaty at An. Aid ·Pharmacy.
Thlaalo way to clot.

Ploit-Up Dollwory, Ooorgoo
Croollllood, . . - -.
tlaMor ......... _ , .
.... ~- ltoodng, ..,.
~-~Ondout;

Now_!_•~.Auno Oood ..,500.

Aobl:;; 114-

Mt-'10:14 or 614-t4W075. '

bullillo hoi-, 114-Mt-2822,

Orancl . ChampiOn bloOdline;
$100; A011tgorator fr-or on
~2. good - h1on; BM-112·

&amp;

chalr1,
china
cabinats,
washstand•, dryslnks, ltG.
Wholesale &amp; rtlall. River Valley

VacuuM CIMner Repair, Fr11

2

v.a1 ~uto,

Ford F·150 4•4.

HontO ..pn;ov-nfo:

~'!:'!.'!.~ Room Addklono,
.---ion WOfk, Rooting,
Kit- laths. Froo Eo1-aal ~. No Job
Too Big Or SntaiiiiM-311-0511.
Dawlo -ng· llaohlno Ai&gt;d

RUFTHO

Ntw gaa tenka, one tl)ll true~
,882..3486.
WhHiel l'lldlators tloor mats
1 WV. 304:
otc. Do AAIOIO, Aoploy,
1VI:I · Oklo Dolla U . Fully · 372·3U3 or 1-800-273-1329.
Loodod, Good CondHion, Ton
High Mlloago, 1100. 114-311.0415 79
Campers 1
(Choolllroj.

I Slmmontal cowo· Purolnd
Slnwnontal holloro
bullo; 112
hlalan Blue, 14 Slmmental

I

18~

UphOJIIery

Yooro Eoporlonoo On Oldor •

.

18vt lauzu TrooP" 4wd1 4dr, ps,
pb, hpd, $12,000, 114-387-7044.

11 Autos for Sale

choice.

T"-s

114" hlah 32"

Clll T'1y To Aelertt ASpac:a

.

ff1

Home
lmprov1111ents

Curtlo

1'17 Ford Ao,_or, XL Loadod

Transportation

.

and 40 Gallion

wldo, qjl oach. Stonn wTndowo
wltb ....... to Ill abovo "'"'
- ttO.OO aoch. Aloo 1 win- : 41 112" high 31" ,.ldo, 1
window; u· hfgh, 21• wide.
Eooh wlh OIOFIII window. S~. oo
I * .... 304-1711.1131.
Wlnlor Dab¥ Clo1"'!'1 Boy 1).18
llontho, CIMn l Now Cond.
Toro, llaltloo, Choapl Now
Joitny Lynd Cha1111ing Tlblo,
S30 114-347-4415 (ChOohln~ .
Woodchuct&lt;, Coal Wood, BurnIng Fu..._. 80:000 BTU, E•col·
loiit Condhlon, 1500. Phono:
IM-3U-134.
.

81 Ranllnt_
_ FIN Mark .. Spac:t.

New oak furniture : tabln

gee.

fllus ·w _ , a

ss.oo For Frldoy And Soturdoy.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home tumlt hlngs.
Hour~: .Mo......S.t, 0-5. 6.14-44$.
0322. 3 mil• out Bulavill~ Rd.
Froo Doilvory.

Drl.....,....

1101, new.

--= . . . ..

Broyhill 3 pc. Living Room

USED

1ta ropiOcomlnt . Ewo latllbo,
304--IU-11112.
.

·~·. ~d

_ _ , . . ._
.
Wl18rHMrar8olel:l, 40, 3001~

nlturt, 114-44&amp;.7C44.

W11hers, dryara, rtfrigtrators,
rwng•. Sklgga Appliancu, 76
V1ni Street, Call 614-446·7398, 1·
100--4911-34119.

w-

VIctor cutting, torch

Hay I Grain

Hoy tor -· -·111112.
FOfd Von E·:ZSO, ~ Lhlr
Hoy lor aalo, oquan bolaa 1:1 1 1187.
$2.50.
Round boloo ....
•- OIC. h• Fuol lnloctod. Automatic Ovor·
304-e7S-311110.
drlvo, Alr1 _El&lt;oollont Condhlon,
Aokl1111: 10,200 S.On AI: 3!!.2
Promlum dairy AHoila rollo m~onuo, Gllllpollo. 614·
delf.,.ry, avalfabll. M~an 'l
Farm, At. 35, 30W37-2011.

63 · Livestock

" " " - · 1100; .Suzuld 110
llhlft drive motoreycJa, &amp;725;
114-'JU.:IIIII.

chllra, antiquo highchair, apt
aiD refrigerator, 304-675-48,13.
txt2 Carpot, $60; Mollohan Fur·

81

braod,

304471-a:lla. .

Olllo. 1-1011-

f_lda In truck campOr,
-1; Hondo 100

3 dlnttt.._tt, eqfl ·a chair,
wood plttl!rm rocker, 2 accent

GQPii

64

PlaoUo -

Goods

Suitt, 3 &amp;rovhlll

WINM:_wl_lot
In pol_ ....... .

...., Culrirl linch
Thlu
10 lnall .. ln - · Ron
1

LIVestOCk

....._1!10-..
;....ml•od
_,_,,

-

Household

~044.

•.

e3

12 Wlllt_
l d to Buy

· Mlrchlndlu
51

October 4, 1892

October4,1882

1711. CIIII!AT IIIVIIMioT - 3 1--..t lplll. manto..
Ful.. ~
- ·- tho
llvlng,IOOfll,
- · - oq. '!;
opp. t4!1P
~ o1 ""'*10 your. own
homo along . .~ a - . Call tor moro
lnkN'mlllofL

'

IIU1. NEW LllllNG - Loc*lng lcr 8 011. 1M.. Lorgo

- - ....... ~-onoldSR 180
PGIIIr. ca11or appo~~•n••· t.to,ooo.

.

_&lt;ON

eor.or. OrlwoAIto-WNio
._,.Ct.

�.... ,. ....

~r ....

. . .~ ••• .., • • -

. .. .

.'

'

... . .

• h

..

-..

•

•

...

•

• ., ....

..
nmt.-..selitlnel

-,

Strickland demands ap-ology·
.over gun control -remark
W..

Trade strategy
one year overdue

OPPOSES GUN CON·
TROL .:.... Congressional eandidate Ted .Str.icllland ~aid
recently th~t be opposes gun
cpntrol and demaaded an
apology lor a remark-made by
. news conference in Cincinnati.
Congressmaa Bob McEwen's
"We've reached the end ·of the
campaign manager concern· road. The property is for sale.·' _
ing his position oa gnn conLeser said Scripps lias received
trol. Ted Stricklan4, right, is
ellis from two interested parties.
He declined to identify lhem but• shown here with his lather,
said one can came from lhe Pitts- · Orville Strlclcland, 88, and a
huntiilg riDe. ·
burgh area. He would not reveal
lhe asking price.
Th~ CODIJ?IIIIY wiD continue to
neg&lt;?ttate wtlh the Teamsters as Varian is presented
required by law, Leser said.
35-y~r service award
Josep_h Moliilero, president of
T~ I..oc:W 211, said lhe_Press . • CHESHIRE . Robert M: Vl!fian,
hal!· played f~ 11!"11~ wtlh aU maintenance mechanic-A at the
- of•,t;-Theemployees li~. .
Ohio VaDey E~tric COipotation's
II' proposal e~ hWJ- , K'yger Creek Plant, · recently
dreds ~f jobs and pr~vtdes the received his anniv!isary award for
reJII!Iining emJ!Ioyees wtth lhe fol- 35 years of sernce.
. ··
.
lowmg wage Jncreases: zero perVarian joined OVEC on
zero~~~ September 20, 1957, as a laborer in
.,..,.. .. ~ ~d.
..ur ould the labor depanment. In 1961 he
--:-·
$II
ne w
transferred to lhe operations dpartdle ~ slow deat~. I!, means our ment 15 a utility worker. In 1966 he
~ISC • some pomL
became a maintenance helper in the
. Press C~. G~neral Manager maintenance department He
J1mmy Man1s S&amp;Jd-the paper has
d
d h · h h
•·
suffered from declinin" advertis· a ~ance t rougn ! e .va~lous
in~ circulation · •
P
mamtenance mechamc classificatilllio, above-av=
lions ~d in'1979, hew~ promoted
tribution coslll.
10 ~tenance ~c-A. .
Yru:1an and b1s wtfe; Max me,
About 600 drivers went 0
.
n reside m Syracuse
.
strilce May 17 after lhe company
·
·
·
tried to estal!li$h a new distribution
plan tllll wcid'd bave eliminated 75
percent of lhe bargaining unit'_s ·
JObs. The company has since
.reduced the proposed cuts 10 45
percent
.
The sttite shut down lhe after' '
noon Press and_morning Post·
Gazette, which is owned by ,Blade
Communications Inc. of. Toledo,
.Ohio, but is printed and published
by lhe Preas Co. under a joint operating llplelllellt tllll ·expires at lhe ·
end of tile cleclde. · · ·:
A message seeking comment
about lhe sale from John Robinson
Block was · not immed'iately
returned Friday. Block is publisher
and ediulr-in-dtief of The Blade of
Toledo, which the family also

.---...,.,='==~"""''"""===~~~~-=~----.

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
September Ui,1992
Sl'OCK STEERS:
59.QO.ll7.00
300-under
60.()().108.00
300-500
50.()().88.50
S00-700
48.()().78.00
SOO..Over
STOCK HEIFERS:
(i!l.Q0.98.50
300-under
55.Q0.99.QO
300-500
5().()().88.00
S00-700
47.50--69.25
801k&gt;ver
STOCK BULLS:
53.QO.U2.00
300-under
51.()().100.00
30Q.SOO
51.()().92.00
S00-700
Slaughter BuDs
47.50--61.75
360.()()-940.00 '
Cows&amp;. Calves BH
38.50--63.50
Bred Cows By#
310.00--666.00 BredCowsBH
Slaughlel' Cows:
Wah Dressing
-45.QO.S4.50
uiiliiy
38.()().45.00
25.()().37.00
Cannel' &amp;. Cuuer

=first:·

·-

Choice
Medium
Good

94.50-103.00
86.7.5-93.00
78iQ0.85.00

Blue ·
Ewes ·
Baby Calves BH
HORSEScwt -

35.()().50.00
19.()().25.50
45.00-131.50
35.00--61.00
65.()().130.00

LAMBS:

==

High. •

r

~k:Cr:!~·ots~

lhis may be lhe biggest concem·in
lhe industry' .
GrliZing livestock will' be the
topic of several sessions this faD ,
and winter. A specill "Grazing" '
Seminar will be held November 7,
from 9:30 a.m. • 2 p.m. in Wood
bll,l on lhe Campus of lhe Universi·
ty of Rio Grande: Dr. Les Reed,
AnirnaiiCientist at West Virsinia
University will be the k. eynote
1peaker. The focus will be on
dOvelopina management systems
thll flii:Hitate year-round grazina.
Mlrt your calendar.
A twilisht session i.s being
11l•nped on October 15, 6 :p.m. at
t11o Bob HendershQl.Farm, 25995
Stile Roure 159, Cli:IeviUe, Ohio.
'l'IUIICIIion will featlft rotatiooaJ
grazing, fence desian·and warm :

.

.

=far
-~
...........

• PreconditiOJ'lintReceiving
ChQw - highly J&gt;!11atable
gets calves eating fast.
• Helps protect calves
against sickness and death
~due to stress.
~.

-

• Quickly eliminates shrink,
·~ !X&gt;Unds true gain. ·
\

~

IQl R&amp;G FEED • SUPPLY CO.

.::.!.

...... _

IH • • N

......

Hl-2164

'1110 _ _ ... _ . , . . . , . , . , ...... " " " ' . - - .

a.-alli:Ju

---

..

1 Section, 10 Pogeo 25 cento
A Muttlmedlo Inc. Newopoper ·

-- . . -

.Navigato:rs ready·for
~n-ew Ohio River locks

''

•

. YEAR BEGINS • Activities at Gallia/Meigs
_ Head Start are Ia full swing. Applications lor
the program ire a ow available from the
Pomero;r center (992-3088), and lour year olds
from pnmarily low-income families &amp;re accepted
in.to the program throughout the year. Older
three year olds and younger five year olds are

accepted as space is available. Here, Susan -Cole·
man, 1 classroom aide, reads a story to 1Myca
· Michaels, Nathaniel Cook and Joshua Nelson
d!l~lng their w~klf. visit to the center. Family
v1sits al the -child '!i bome are also a part of tbe
state and feder•Jiy,funded program. (Sentinel
Photo by BFian J, Reed)
·

HOGGSETI, W.Va. (AP) - A lOws on the river. But when diesel- replaced by fewer, larger ones.
new canal and system of locks will powered boats began pushing Gallipolis is one of the last to be
be dedicated at lhe Gallipolis Dam 1,000-foot strings of barges, the replaced.
and Locks on lhe Ohio River, about 6QO.footloclt at Gallipolis became
In 1980. the Corps decided on
25 miles upstream from Hunting- a bottleneck. .
lhe canal instead of building a new
ton, qn Sat~y .
After a few weeks of fin al lock and dam three miles downBoat owners who want to be dredging and te$ting, river shipping stream from the existing one. Corps
among lhe first to pass lhrough the will have a stra i~hter, faster pas- officials knew the new dam would
GaUipolis Locks and Dam at cere- sage past lhe Qallipolis Dam.
have cost-less to build, but the
mony should apply to the U.S.
"We're at both locations right canal could be finished sooner ·and
Army Corps of Engineers today, now," said lockmaster Pat Worley. would be more economically effi· · said spokesman Thorn Robinson.
"We're setting up in our new oper- cienL
'
Gallipolis was the first of the ations buil~ing. Our shop is over
Construction on the $224 milhigh-lift dams on lhe Ohio River. here (at the new locks}. We're still lion project began in November
- The loclcs on the dam were put in handling trl!,ffie over at the old · 1987.
_service in 1937, although ther. locks. "
Late lhis year or in early 1993,
weren't officially dedicated unlll
W.hen lhe U.S. Army C_orps of . the Corps will advertise for
June 1938. But they quietly ~ng1,neers began upgradm~ the improvements to the dam. Tbe
became obsolete.
nver s !~It-and-dam system m lhe found~tion will be strenglhened
The small locks and the bend 1940s, tt dectded to focus ~ lhe and the eight rollers that hold back
weren't problems when small stretch &lt;?f ~ver between Galhpohs the river will be replaced, Corps
steamboats were pushing small and LouJSVJUe.
officials have said.
Many smaller dams have been

Voinovich, Riffe travel
state with different go~Is
,•

· 4 cyl. eng., P. lleermg, P. bray•. auto.
trana .. air cond., AMIFM llereo cailaeltl), lUI
wheel, crul•• control, P. winilowa &amp; P.
locka, P. driver aeat, rear window defroster.
Loaded.
·
3 TO 010051 flOII

ua ·

""'

· COI:UMBUS, Ohio ( AP) the1 designed whl\n they had· a that the governor is announcing
Republican · 0Qv.
George maJority on the state Apportion- state projects, meeting with newsVomovich and Democratic Speaker ment Bllllr¢ Republicans captured paper editorial boards and attend'
Vern Riffe' are traveling around the board ·when Voinovich and l_ng f11nd raisers for GOP candi;
Ohio 10 try help lheir opposing par• Secretary of State Bob Taft~ who dates. ·
ties keep or gain control of the are statutory members, too1c office
Voinovich began Wedne~y iri
in January 1991. ·
Ohio House.
·
Toledo o.n behalf or Sally Perz, a
Voinovich started visiting
Democrats currently conbOI lhe management ¢onsultant who is
House districts last weelr;, including House 61-~8 . Riffe claims he has cbal~nging Rep. Donald Czarcins·
five where Democratic incumbents ·· quaiity candidates and can 1teep at · lti, D·Toledo, in lhe 52nd House
could be vulnerable as a result of a least a bare majority despite the District
Republican-drawn redistrictinJI new districts. He plans to be on the
plan lhat favors Republican candi- ~!)ad lhe next few weeks also, but
•
dates. •
he declined to divulge his schedule.
Democrats have controlled tbe
·Jenny Camper, Voinovich's
House since 1973 in districts lhat _ press spokeswoman,
said Friday
.

•

.

----~Local

.....

~ Mi&lt;k!lepo~ youth, foimd in a comotose condition behind the
Me1gs Jun~~ High School e&amp;!IY Satur~y evening, was reponed in
good _condition at&lt;;irant ~osp1tal, Columbus, this morning.
Middlepon Poltce Satd lhe Middleport emergency squad transJl!lned David Eakins, 15, of Middleport, to Veterans Memorial Hos'PIIlil at 6:53 p.m. He was talcen from there by LifeFlight 10 Grant at
9:36p.m.
·
Po~ said that Char$es are pending against adults who reportedly contnbuted_to lhe mculent.
·

V6-eng. power steer., power brakes,
-auto. trans., air Ciond., AMIFM stereo 8
track, ti~ steering wheel, cruise control,
rear defroster, atyled wheels wltrim
rings, good tires, extra clean.
-

'

Schools to close .

IPICIIL

Bradbury, Harrisonville, Rutland and .Salem Center Elementary.
Schools wtll be closed on Tuesday, so lhat Leading Creelc Conser.
vancy District can repair water lines.

1..1 DODGE DIKDU Lalli ID 414

V6 eng., P. steering, P. brakes, 5 speed
trans., AMIFM stereo cassette, rear
step bumper, bed liner, all season tires,
cloth interior, lull wheel covers, eXtra
·· clean, siidiQg rear window.

·

·

Grant awarded

Kalhy Haley andJul~ Hubbard, teachers at Pomeroy Elementary
School, wrote a proposal for and have received lhe Manila Holden .
Jeonings Foundation granL
·
. The $3,000 grant is to be ~ to _develop basic elementary materials needed for hands-on pracbce w11h malh and science.

'4811

EMS units answer calls

1171 CuI I·'II .IUPII-1 Dl. •au•a•

Units of Meigs Emcsgency Services answered 15 caDs for assistance over lhe weekend and lhis morning,
On Saturday_at 12:31 p.m., Racine, Pometoy and Syracuse units
w~nt 10 lll1: accident on County Road .35. Mickey Watson, Jeffrey
Gillen, Allee Bustapa, Angelita Carpenter, .Jason Taylor, French
Caqienter and Maty Taylor were talcen to Veterans Memorial Hospital, At 2:52 p.m.• Pomerey squad went 10 Seeond and LY!In and·
~ Ethel Shasteen to Vetaans. At 2;55 p.m .. Pomeroy and Middlepon units respon4ed to East Second Street for a structure ftre at
-tbe_ B~ Teaford Jll ope.1y. Minor smoke damage was reported to

VB ,eng., P. ateer., P. brakes, auto.
trans., air corid., AM'FM stereo 8 track
tilt .&amp;cruise, remota mii'I'Qr, styled
wheals with trim rings, one local owher,
53,862 mllea.

road

..._.•••

Wol•wlto you to our 1993 CustoMer C:olollratlo11
Oct. 9th &amp; 10th. Como I• and r11l1toir for prl111
to lttglwe11 away. Drawlnl fo llo hold Saturday
~
•fttriiHII It :Jt P.M.
.
Rolrosh11onts wll llotenttl•.
· Brlqln ,..,_.1l1d dial oa a New Car or Jraok 8ad we
·
· wiD b7 to
t1ae .,_L
10&amp; A GOOD .... r.:..
.

••ec or._,

sa .rAcs aoua w110a aoa

Our Service Deplrtment Is ~ Mon•.frl. N; Sat. 8-12
Muffler ShlJp'Mon
;-A; Slt"'&amp;;12-

I, ,

briefs-......:.....

Youth reported in good condition

OLDI. CUft.IIIIUPUMI4 Dl.

-

-1

........

. ...

Mon., Tues.; Wed., Fri. 9-7 or
Thurs. &amp; Sat 9-3

air cond., AM/FM atereo cassette
w/premium sound, tilt &amp; crulae, rear
defroster , -rear wiper, P. driver seat, GT
cast alum, wheels, new Brldgeatone tires,
35,000 miles on car, local owner.
WAS •
$10,999

· .

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Oct-a'ber s, 1992

'

IIMI FORD PIOBI ft I DB.
4 cyl. turbo eng., PS, PB, 5 speed trans.,
·

IPICIIL

-

.

See Scott or Ralph Sheets .

..., .

~

Vol. 43, No.114
Copyrtghled1882

a1
/

•

•

'

-e

' ·'

.
,-

•

•

"'

1989 Ford RongerXLT, air..........S6995
1988 Ch~vy Sl 0, air.,.............. 54595
1987 _Ford longer XLT, air~ .. ••••••• 54995
1986 GMC ~Ton Pickup •. :........S359S
1983 Ford XTon Pickup, auta••• s2795

owns.

The: Teamsters called UJ.&gt;OD
Congress 10 conduct hearings mto
whether the Press was trying to
eliminate lhe Post-Gazette or violale antitrust laws.
"I think that's ridiculous,"
Leser said of the ·union' s claim.
"We-can't get rid of lhe Pittsbmgh
Post-Gazette.
We have· a contract
:.:.froo.:.::m:.:D:;..·.::l_ _ __ _ _ _ __
0 ~~- C; .;o: :n: :ti: :nu:- ;ed'-"_
that runs through 1999." ·
Post-Gazette Editor John Craig _
ncnu-and opJ)onents of lhe issue. season grasses. David Bean, New
said
lhe sale should not affect lhe
Molt of lhe 16-page review centers Zealand Grazing CQnsultant and
joint
operating agreement, 'but he
011 fannina and food, issues tra(li.
Fencing Expen will be in atten- could not say when or how the
tionaUy a{gned with lhe Extension dance. Most of us know lhe host
Post-Gazette wiD .be able ·to pubService. It is not a exhaustive
~L
his
role
_
as_
S.C.S.
liilt
account .or legal .review. O.S.U;
Press Editor Angus McEachran
Extension Service Director Dr.
Edward VoUborn is the GaiDa said aU 210 editorial worlrers will
eith Smith, emphasizes that Couaty Extension Agent, Agri·
remain on duty inde_fmilcly.
Extensioa is not taking sides on the culture. •
iuile bul putting together some
educatiooll
so people
can
mate upinformation
their o'll'll minds.
Stop ,.-----~--------------.....
or can for a free copy.
The Tenth Annual Gallia Coun·
ty Pride In Tobacco Association,
Annual MeeiinJ will be· Tb~y~
October IS, 7 p.m. at lhe Senior
Citizens Center just west of Gal·
lipoliJ. Reservati~ may be IJIIIde
by calling 446· 7007. Mr. Steve
Newton, Director of the Peanut,
Tobacco and F&lt;Ritry Department, t--~'-----,----.,..,
for the American Farm Bureau will .,i •
be lhe guest speKer. His topic will
be "A Look to the Future for lhe
Tobacco Industry". Mr. Newton
has. ~ a lot of leadership in
lti 171111 . ., ..
gelling mformation necessary 10
resolve lhe issue on whether c. not
lobacco pioducers should IICCCPt
lea money for tobacco b'sW for

'·

236 SECOID AYE. · GllliPOUS,,.,H
PHOIE 446·3060
. .

1-l'lld ft•N .. 4 Dl..•

2A.Q0.36.00
2()0.250
21.()().31.50
300-500
. ..
21.Q0.31.QO
Male Hogs
14.()().23.00
Pigs
. 29.()().44.00
GoalS
;m~."--·--------------~
., ~~~e=~~C=al~f~Sa:~~=~F~ri~~·~Oc~t.~9,~7~:3~0~

461316

'

'

&lt;-

Kicker:

GALL-IPOLIS
M8TOR CO. ·INC.

:;"Jl:

VEAL:

.

. Low tonight In 30s.
Tuesday, sunny. High In 60s.

29-30-31-37-43-47

Page4

. ..

ons.~~

Pick 3:
417 .
Pick 4:
5416
Super Lotto:

USDA wu required under the •
1990 farm _bill to n:l~ its long- ::
term strategy for l&amp;ficultural trade ~
. by OcL 1, 1991. The docUment has ·
yet 10 be released, and an agency :
offte!aJ 51)'11 it may never be made :
pu1!1ic.
,"
Rep. Bob Wise, D-W.Va., wrote ;
~.P.!cultare Secretary Edward ,
Madiian on lhe one-year anniver- _
sacy of lhe deadline 10 complain ~
thil he has yet 10 see the strategy. ~
But USDA is able to use wiJit it :
has
IOgether to guide.
its.:.r.n
and put
trade-decisi
,..__....
•
..•

Scripps Co. planning to sell
strike-bound Pittsburgh Pre.ss

after Strickland issued a news
l'elease saying he had received a
high rating from lhe National Rifle
. PITTS.BURGH {AP) - The
Association for his opposition to decision to sell The Pittsburgh
gun conbOI. ·
.
· Press is irreversible because there
Strickland said he received an is litde hope of resolving a 4 J(i.
"A" rating from the NRA, "an monlh-old Teamsters strilce, said
identical rating (o that of ... the head of lhe company lhat owns
McE'VI(en on the NRA's election . the newspaper.
year survey.''
·
Cincinnati-based E.W. Scripps
Ms. Briggs responded with a Co. has owned lhe newSpaper for
news reiC$11 quoting, a J976 inter- nearly 70 years. The decision to
view Strickland gave in which he seD it came Friday, a ~Y aft&amp; 1a11ts
said he does not lilte guns.
broke off with lhe Teamsters union,
She said Stricldand, a psycholo- which represents the Pittsburgh
-gist from Lucasville, "shouldn' t Press,, Co.'s delivery driver:s.·.
~ive s(lonsmen and gun ownLet m~ assure you,lhis ts not a
. .he cited a 1976 n_ewspaper . plo:,:." satd Lawren~e A. Leser,
S
prestdent of E.W.-Scnpps Co., at a

I

dark...

Ohio Lottery

Miami '
Dolphins
stun Bills

WASHINGTON (!J&gt;) - · Th e ~
Agriculture Department's long- ~
. la'lllltrlleiY 10 pOIIIOIC U.S. food
and farm producu overseas is a .
year ovadue. A Houle leader says
failure to publish the blue.Print
leaves farmCn; exporters, business~
es and Congress " tol.lllly in lhe •

From ltlllf aad we reports'
inlei'View in which Strickland
IIone,' keeps. a loaded handgun in
LUCASVIlLE
Democratic
......
.,1
·
"I
-~·"
do
15
6th Congressionll -District candi- _q~ saymg,
..... --Y
his bedroom. II makes him feel
date Ted Slricldand-saLfshe will · . •ngunot.\~ guns and I do not own a safe. It's his right, and no one
should eue lhat away liom him. I
~-for Ill~ from . RcilubStrickland said Thursday that he don't think lhe ~t should
_ . oppopeat s campaign ~does not like guns but supports lhe be interfering wilh any law-abiding
er ~a remark she made about his right 10 bear anns. In a recent p-ess citizen who wishe s to keep li
JIOIIli~ on gwu:c_Jntrol.
release, Strickland said he hails firearm." ·
, .~.
·
'\It's llso a q11estion of basic
Strickland saJd Tburs~y that from a large famJ!y of nine. He
U. ~ . Rep. Bob McEwen s c_am- adiled tllll aU of his brothers own self-defense," argues S~ckland.
p~n. ~anag_er Barbara .~nggs · gunsandhlintonan:gularbasis.
"Many Anlericlm feel safe wilh a
m
.a «!esP•cablc charge when • . "She made a serious accusation firearm in lhe house. there should
abe satd 1n I ~~ws ~elease that about my principles and con - be no n:asoo why lhe government
~trickland was .on J!7ord_as _say- science. It was unfair and below or anyone else should take that
mg he ~d forgo h1s-pnqctples ·the belt, •• he said.
right away."
and consctencc 10 tell lhe voters
"I believe that the Second
In addition, Strickland said there
. what~ want 10 ~·"
.
Amendment t~ '!~~ Consti_tution sl)ould not be any n:striction placed
Stric~la~d 1s opposmg guaranlees an indiVIdual's nght to . on· lhe sale, or ownershiJ.&gt; of any
. McE~en. s b1d for re-election 10 lhe ~e:/ and bear arms," Strickland firearms, or any ammunillon used
6lh Dislnct ~
by sponsmen for .hunting, target
Ms. BngjlS late Thursday
"My 88-year-old dad. who lives sliooling or self defense
referred qiiCSIIons about lhe state·
·
ment to McEwen, who d id not
·

~a::!m~c;o:;::~~y

••

1112

•

one apat11ne0L

.,.

•

At 4:03 p.m., Scipio Fire Department went to an auto -fire on
Homer Hill. Jell')' Tillis was _lhe OWI_IC£~ At 6:53 p.m., Middleport
squad was sent tp an area behind the JURior hi~. David Eakins was
taken 10 Veterans. At 9:36 p.m., he was talcen to Grant Medical
Center lry Life FlighL At 7:08 p.m .. Rutland unit went to Wright
Road. MiciJ&amp;d R.ose was talcen to Holzer' Medical Cent&amp;. At 7:47'
p.m .• Rutland sq'uad went 10 an accident on McCumbet Road:
Miranda I.ong and Jessica Hatfield were talcen to Veterans. At
f"''.ll:S6~ P·m .. Pomeroy •q11ad went. to. Butternut Aven!le. John
Umford vias taken 10 Vetmns. ·
·
·
· On Sunday at I: IS a.m., Racine unit went 11J Old Portland Road
and ~ Mike Henry to V~s. At 4:44 B,m .. Racine squad went
to Main Street for Alena Reese, who was tiilten to Vetc:nns. At 7
a.m.. Pomeroy and Spacuse units went to U.S. Route 33 for an lllito
aa:ident. Rran Aupllerger was lre8ted atlhe scene, and Jodie Rope
and James Henry were lalten to VeteranS. At 9:55 p.rn., Syracitse
~~~~tel' Street. Ral:hel ~was Iaten '?Pleasant
At \:52 a.m. on Ma)day, Ril!;ine squad walt to Vine Street for
April Hudson. She was lllten to Vetttans. At 7:45 a.m., Pomeroy
unit went 10 Old Forest Road. Glaia lhle Wis. '!cad on arrival. .

·t?::r

.

,,, '

'

TOY RUN • The Meigs County Bikers held
their annnal Christmas toy run Saturday. Tbe
group Is pictured bere leaving the parking J,ot in

Pomeroy. ,iU a result or the run, many children
in !be (OUBty will be provided with toys ror
Cbtlitifi'nas they might not otherwise receive.

Seven injured in weekend wrecks

By JIM FREEMAN
· OVP News Staff
Seven minor injupes resulted
from two of five wreclcs investigated in Meigs County Saturday and
Sun~y . by lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol.
A Pomeroy man was cited after
a one-vehicle wreck on Ohio 12A in
SutlPn TQwnship Satur~y around
7:30a.m.
. George R. Sutton, 54, 42040
Lovers Lane, was westbound on
Ohio 124 and ran off lhe right side
of lhe !Old, lhe patrol teponed. His
pickup lhen came back onto the
roadway and went off the left side
of lhe road before striking a ditch
and a telephone pole.
- No injuries were reponed. Damage to Sisson's 1990 Dodge Dakota
was listed as moderate.
Sisson was cited for failure to

con~~ ~·e were transponed to

Veterans Memorial Hospillil after a
or.e-l:ar wreck on Portland Road in

Lebanon Township around noon
Sarur~y .

According 10 the -patrol, Alice
M. Bostapn,lB, 2715McEiwin SL,
Akron, was southbound on Portland Road and drove off lhe right
"ide of lhe road. Her car went over
an embankment and overturned
onto its top in a smaU creek.
_Bostapn and her passengers,
Mary A. Taylor, 15, Cheshire, and
Jeffery Gillen, 15, French Carpenter, 14, and Jason Taylor, 13, all of
Racine, were transported by lhe
Mei~s CountY Emergency ~cal
Servtce to VMH where they were
treated and released.
.
Damage.to Bostapn ~ s 1980 Plymoulh Horizon was listed as mod·
crate.
No citations were issued.
No injuries were reported after a

Presidential debates to begin Sunday

W.ASHINGION (AP~- Presidenllal campa!gn debates between

.-. rt a·gree·s to hear ·
COu
.P-ar o'c·h.Ia I'sc h00J·· case
.
_

one-car accident on Ohio 124 in
Long and a passenger, Jessyca
Lebanon Township Saturday F. Hatfield, 15, Racine, were transaround 4:10p.m. · ·
ported to VMH by lhe EMS where
Lisa M: Pape; 23, 30485 Bashan · they.were treated and released.
Rd .. Racine, was westbound on
Damage to Long's · 1985
Ohio 124 when her car went off the Chevrolet Celebrity was listed as
right side of lhe road and struck a moderate and disabling.
ditch, the pabOI reported.
Long was· cited for failure to
Damage to Pope's 1991 Chevro- conuol. ·
let Cavalier was listed as light No
A Worthington man was cited
citations were issued.
after a one-vehicle wreck on U.S.
Two minor injuries were report- 33 in Bedford Township Sunday
eel after a one-car wreck on Grove aroun d 7 p.m.
Road in Rutland Township around
Ryan R. Augsburger, 20, 611
6:30p.m. Saturday.
Morning Street, was southbound on
Miranda D. Long, 18, 1183 U.S. 33 when he lost conbOl of his
McCarley Dr., Columbus, was vehicle in a iight curve, lhe patrol
northbound on Grove Road a'rid reported. His vehicle went off lhe
lost conbOI in a rigllt curve. Her car left side of the road, stru ck a
went off lhe left side of lhc road. guardrail and went over an
struck an embankment and over- embantment.
tunied.

_

George Bush and Bill Clinton are
s~hed~ledto bel\in next Sunday
mght ID St. Louts. Independent
"candidate ROSS Perot was invited to
participate ~nd will attend, his

. ~~~~e~~nt on Sat~y ~ : r:nce presidC~Jtial ~bate,

set a COCIIJiressed, ni~e-d~y
'
'
·
·
·
·
timetable for lhe lhree presidential
•
WASHINGTON (AP) _ the Salpointe Catholic High School.
encounters and one vice presidenSupreme Court today set lhe ~tage
The Education of the Handi-· tiaJ debale- a series of confronta'
for a key ruling· on government- · capped Act requireNtatcs receiv· tioo! with"ll!e potential for s!wJting
church relations. agreeing to decide ing federal funding to offer all up lhe mce for lhe White House.
wheth·e r _public school districts handicapped children a " free
Each debate will be 90 minutes
·
public
education,"
and
long,
t,alte place be'ore
must pay for sign-language inter" a live audi·
preters . used by deaf children
funds are available for sign· ence and be open·IO all subjects. A
attending parochial schools..
·- lllllguage illlerJnters.
variety of formats will be
The justices said they will
School district officials said - employed.
review a ruling that denied such . ~lhy ~dinpay aU hcosts ~associated
The presidential debates will be
public f~ fora deaf boy who ~· provlmng sue an_mterpeter O.ct. ll in. St, Louis, Oct. 15 in
. attended a religious hiSh school in 1f James~~ public schOOl or Richmond, Va., and.OcL 19 in East
Tucson, Ariz.
.'B
P'lialvatefusedsdlool.
Lansing. Mich.; according to the
At issue is the inherent tension . But
o c s re
to. pay joint statement by Roben Teeter
between tWo separate clauseS of the f«»: sencJi!1&amp; to interpreter iniO Sal· and Mickey Kantor, chairmen of
Constitution's F'ICSt ~endlner!t- pomte High. ·
.
. the Republican and Democratic
one barring 1 government "estab'rhe -Zobresu aued the school campaigns .. The' vice presidential
·li,sbment" of religion and the other district over its refuall, but James 11ebatc was set for Oct. 13 in
ban:in&amp; lhe pemment from •'pro- has been paduated ·from Salpointe Atlanta.
,
hibiting the free exercise" of reli· durin!,thci legal battle, last June. · The presidential debate formats
glut. .
· Thb~ ~restahat~,_a_hl tci 'dbe rt:im • broke down this way:
· Larry and Sandra Zobrelt liked
.or w . u ...y pill a 11gn- · · -Oct. II : a panel of questionthe Catalina Foothille SchoOl Dis- language interpreter .who .helped ets, the format IIUJII had wanted
lrict in 198'7. to provide their son, James for his four years in high · for aU lhe confrontaions.
James, with a sign·lanfW~~C inier- . scl!ool.
:....OCL 15: a single mnderaiOr
prettr to help him in hiS studi~ at
who ~ ~'solicit questionS from a

nonTr:

'

•

•

,_

..

Jive audience and ask appropriate
follo~·up ~uesti?ns," a fonnat in
lme With amton s requests.
-Oct. 19: a single moderator
for the. first half, a panel for the

....

lhe campa!gnS settled on lhe smglemoderator format.
.
.
All were scheduled for 7 p.m.
except the Oct. 15 debate, which ..
wiD be at 9 p.m., all EDT.'
• -

GfOUD d

CfeW 0

f

USAir goes on strike
WASHINGTON (AP) - Thou,:
sands of ground crew members
struclc USAir today, disrupting the
·airline's service in dozens of cities
' in dispute over wage.concessions
and work. rules.
Seventy~five pel'Cellt of lhe airline's flightS were talcing off, how.
ever; according to spokeswoman
Nancy Vaushan. s~ said lhe airline was llllking arrangements with
other carriers 10 accept passeng~
. whose fltghts wac cancelled.
The US Air Express and USAir
Shuttle serviceS were not affected,
she said.
· . .

a

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